There’s no better way to show your
appreciation than with a One Great Gift
Card from Tysons Corner Center.

WHERE THE STORES ARE
1961 Chain Bridge Road, McLean VA 22102-4562
Just off the Capital Beltway (I-495), exits 46A and 47A
703-847-7300 • 1-888-2TYSONS • ShopTysons.com
Purchase fee applies. Terms and conditions, including fees, may
apply to Visa Gift Cards and are available at Tysons Corner Center
Guest Services, online at www.OneGreatGiftCard.com
and in materials which accompany each card.
Visa Gift Card is issued by U.S. Bank®.

C ON T E N T S
OCTOBER 2008

POLLYWOODBONUS

CONVENTIONALLACCESS

Juleanna Glover recaps the Republican party
scene in St. Paul; Kimball Stroud reports on the Democrats
in Denver. PLUS: Exclusive photos from both conventions.

COVERFEATURE

AMBASSADORSGUIDE

A complete guide to the diplomatic corps, including a full
directory, walking tour of Embassy Row, an exclusive contribution from
Bahrain’s Ambassador Houda Nonoo, etiquette tips, photos, and more.

CARIBBEANTRAVELSPECIAL

HOTISLANDGETAWAYS

From the Four Seasons Resort to quaint boutique
hotels, discover the low-key luxury of Nevis. PLUS: All
that’s hot down in the islands this season!

ONTHECOVER A selection of ambassadors from the 2009 Ambassadors Guide. Individual photo identification begins on PAGE 64 THISPAGELEFTAmb. Carolina Barco of
Colombia and Amb. Chan Heng Chee of Singapore. (Photo by Clay Blackmore) TOPRIGHT Hill Harper and Jennifer Garner at the IFF/SAG party at the Democratic National Convention
in Denver. (Photo by Scott Wagner) BOTTOMRIGHT The Fours Seasons Resort Nevis.

Washington Life magazine publishes ten times a year. Issues are distributed in February, March, April, May, June, July/August, September, October,
November and December and are hand-delivered on a rotating basis to over 150,000 homes throughout D.C., Northern Virginia, and Maryland.
Additional copies are available at various upscale retailers, hotels, select newstands, and Whole Foods stores in the area. For a complete listing, please
consult our website at www.washingtonlife.com. You can also subscribe online at www.washingtonlife.com or send a check for $49.99 (one year) to:
Washington Life Magazine, 2301 Tracy Place NW, Washington D.C., 20008. BPA audited. Email us at info@washingtonlife.com with press releases,
tips, and editorial comments. Copyright ÂŠ2008 by Washington Life. All rights reserved. Reproduction or use of editorial content or photos in any manner
without permission is strictly prohibited. Printed in the United States. We will not be responsible for unsolicited manuscripts or photographs.

the best party embassies, and a profile by John Greenya of the intriguing
his is a momentous time in American history, and in few
Saudi Arabian Ambassador, Adel Al-Jubeir.
places was that more apparent than at the recent political
On the style front, a few weekends ago we sent our all-star fashion
conventions in Denver and St. Paul. There were serious
team to the bucolic village of Middleburg,Va., where they found
issues to tackle during the day: health care, the war in Iraq,
some wonderful boutiques like Tully Rector and Nobel Nielsen, and
and the economic crisis. But when the sun went down in Colorado
showcased some of fall’s best fashion in a decidedly un-horsey way
and Minnesota, each caucus got raucous, with celebrities, politicians,
(more style, less stirrups). Special thanks to
and delegates painting the towns. WL was
the Red Fox Inn and Tavern. In addition,
there for the fun, as were two of our favorite
our own Vicky Moon took up the reins in
Washingtonians, Republican Juleanna Glover
an excerpt about side-saddle stylings from
and Democrat Kimball Stroud, who each
her recent book, Equestrian Style.
report in this issue on the after-hours hoopla.
And of course, while all this was going
While family matters conspired to keep me
on, there were plenty of fabulous parties. We
from St. Paul, I was able to enjoy the best of
sponsored the Washington National Opera’s
Denver with my husband, my mother, and
opening night of La Traviata; the celebritylots of dear friends, and meet many interesting
studded National Hispanic Foundation for
people, like Dan Rather (right).
the Arts’ Noche de Gala and its after-party at
Back in Washington, autumn’s onset
Gazuza; The Children’s Law Center benefit;
indicates change of a different sort on Embassy
and a barbeque hosted by Sheila Johnson for
Row as new ambassadors arrive, present their
Sibley Hospital.We’ve also got exclusive photos
credentials to the President in an elaborate
of the opening of the monumental Richard
Oval Office ceremony, and then settle into
Avedon exhibit at the Corcoran and the ultratheir new homes. Some will stay for a year,
exclusive Reagan Foundation Dinner.
some for twenty, but each is acutely aware of
The social season is in full swing, so
the prestige and responsibility of a posting to
mark your calendars for these upcoming
Washington, and for many this assignment
WL-Sponsored events: Capital Hospice
marks the pinnacle of their careers. So, it is with
Gala (Oct. 4), Dare to Dream Gala (Oct. 6),
our new neighbors in mind that we present the
WPAS Season Opening Celebration (Oct.
annual Ambassadors Guide filled with the most
Dan Rather and I at the Democratic
11), 40th Annual Meridian Ball (Oct. 17),
up-to-date names and contact information
National Convention in Denver.
National Italian American Foundation Gala
for every current ambassador to Washington,
(Photo by Washington Life)
(Oct. 18), Best Buddies Ball (Oct. 18), 50th
along with family information and the address
Anniversary of the Washington International Horse Show (Oct. 21-26),
of their embassies and residences. We’ve also peppered these pages with
Joan Hisaoka “Make a Difference” Gala (Oct. 24), and the Corcoran
helpful photos, embassy etiquette tips, a list of newly arrived envoys, a
1869 Society Fall Fete (Oct. 25).
walking tour quiz, and an exclusive contribution from Bahraini Ambassador
Houda Nonoo.To help highlight the guide, Roland Flamini considers the
changing role of diplomats in a digital age, and Clay Blackmore captures
some of Washington’s female ambassadors, whose number reached an alltime high this fall. This annual issue is one that many of our readers tell
us they keep all year near the phone or in a desk drawer to use whenever
the need arises. After all, diplomats comprise a key element of social life in
Washington, so it pays to know Their Excellencies excellently.
Nancy R. Bagley
Rounding out the diplomatic aspects of the issue, Chief of Protocol
Editor in Chief
Nancy Brinker offers readers a rare tour through some of the private
rooms of Blair House, the historic mansion where visiting heads of state
rest their heads while they are in town. We’ve also got a round-up of
Readers wishing to contact Nancy can email: letters@washingtonlife.com

MAKE NEIMAN MARCUS YOUR
DESTINATION FOR FABULOUS HANDBAGS.
THE NEW FALL COLLECTIONS HAVE
ARRIVEDâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;PREPARE TO GET CARRIED AWAY.

270=4;P]S

PaTaTVXbcTaTScaPST\PaZb^U270=4;8]R

MAZZA GALLERIE TYSONS GALLERIA
NEIMANMARCUS.COM

CONTRIBUTORS

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

1
CLAY BLACKMORE is an established
portrait and wedding photographer. His client
list includes luminaries like Larry King, Forrest
Whitaker, and Jenna Elfman. Blackmore captures
a new generation of female ambassadors in our
cover shoot and 2009 Ambassadors Guide.
2 White House Chief of Protocol NANCY
BRINKER advises the Bush Administration on
matters of diplomatic procedure. She is a former U.S.
Ambassador to Hungary and founder of the Susan
G. Komen Race for the Cure. She contributes to
Inside Homes with a tour of Blair House.
3
TIM COBURN is an award-winning
photographer with a concentration in commercial
photography. Coburn has been working in his
field since 1996, and he lends his eye for style to
our Middleburg Fashion Feature.
NP JAMESCORNWELLis a resident hairstylist
and makeup artist for PR at Partners Salon and
Tim Coburn Photography. Cornwell coifs our
models in the Fashion Feature.
4
ROLAND FLAMINI worked as the
Washington-based chief inter national
correspondent at United Press International until
2006. He was also the foreign correspondent and
World section editor for Time magazine. He writes
about the changing role of the diplomatic corps.
5 JULEANNAGLOVER works as a lobbyist
for the Ashcroft Group and is the former
spokeswoman for Vice President Dick Cheney.
She recounts her experiences at the Republican
National Convention in Pop Politics.

14

6 JOHNGREENYA is a Washington-based
writer. His books include Blood Relations: The
Real David Stockman and Silent Justice: The Clarence
Thomas Story. He profiles Saudi Arabian ambassador
Adel Al-Jubeir in our Diplomatic Spotlight.
7 CARL LEWIS is a retired Olympic gold
medalist in track and field and now lends his time
to helping others, including working with Best
Buddies International, a nonprofit dedicated to
help those with intellectual disabilities. Lewis writes
about this involvement in our Charity Spotlight.
8 DAVIDLMERCER is the founder of Mercer
& Associates, a strategic advisory firm that develops
public/private partnerships and represents government
and corporate entities. He adds his political expertise
to our Candidate Face-Off in Pop Politics.
9 Ambassador HOUDANONOO represents
the Kingdom of Bahrain to the U.S. Her career
has included positions as the financial director of
both Gourmet and Jetflair International, managing
director of Gulf Computer Services in Bahrain,
and General Secretary and founder of the Bahrain
Human Rights Watch Society.
10 LANAORLOFF heads the style consulting
company, “Lana Orloff Style.” With many years of
experience and a love for shopping and fashion,
Lana offers style and image management, closet and
wardrobe organization, and special event styling and
makeovers, among other fashion services.
11 ANDREAROANE is a veteran news anchor
for WUSA9 and a dedicated advocate for the
fight against breast cancer. She writes about the

late Joan Hisaoka and the upcoming First Annual
Joan Hisaoka Gala in our Charity Spotlight.
12 GAILSCOTT is the author of Diplomatic
Dance:The New Embassy Life in America, and she
currently covers the diplomatic community for
Washington Life and The Washington Diplomat. Gail
served as the contributing editor on the 2009
Ambassadors Guide.
13
KIMBALL STROUD is a fundraising
strategist specializing in progressive causes and
film financing, and is a co-founder of the Impact
Film Festival. She recounts her experiences at the
Democratic National Convention in Pop Politics.
14 JEFFREYZELL is President and Chairman
of the Board of JM Zell Partners, Ltd, a real
estate consulting firm. He also serves as President
of Starlight Children’s Foundation MidAtlantic, a
nonprofit bringing joy to ill children. He shares
his story of working with the organization in our
Charity Spotlight.
Corrections from the September 2008 Issue:
On page 18, Former Hook owner Barton Seaver was mis-identified as
the new owner of Tackle Box. He is not involved with either entity.
On page 64, the correct title for the Starlight Children’s Foundation
MidAtlantic event is the Starlight Children’s Foundation MidAtlantic
Ninth Annual Taste of the Stars Gala.
On page 86, the Gucci credit should read GUCCI purple python
medium top handle bag with gold hardware Gucci crest detail
($4,190). Gucci Boutique, 5481 Wisconsin Ave., Chevy Chase, Md.,
301-986-8902.
The models used in the fashion pictorial are from Cima/Matinee
Model Agency and Commence Quest.

PRESTIGE AND PERFORMANCE. Each inspired by its own “winged B” symbol,
Breitling and Bentley share the same concern for perfection. The same extreme
standards of reliability, precision and authenticity.The same unique blend of prestige
and performance. Whether in the Breitling workshops or in the Bentley factory in
Crewe, cutting-edge technology is placed in the service of noble traditions.
Symbolising this communion of ideals,Breitling participated in styling the instrumentation
of the Bentley Continental models, the most powerful ever built by Bentley.

EXCLUSIVITY AND TECHNICAL EXCELLENCE. For devotees of fine
mechanisms, Breitling has created a line of exceptional chronographs named
“Breitling for Bentley”. Representing the culmination of sophisticated aesthetic
research, these wrist instruments mirror the signature features of the famous
British car manufacturer. Dedicated to the automobile world, they incorporate
several exclusive technical characteristics, including a variable tachometer, and are
propelled by high-performance “motors” patiently assembled by watchmakers at
the peak of their art.Time is the ultimate luxury.

The greatest luxury in life is time.
Savour every second.

BENTLEY MOTORS

FYIDC

TheInsider’sGuidetoWashington|October Outings and the Social Calendar

Who’s Next
Kate Marie Grinold

M

iss District of Columbia 2008 is uniquely well-suited to
represent her city. Intelligent and self-effacing, by day
she’s a hard-working staffer at Innocents at Risk, a non-profit
that combats human trafficking; by night she’s a vivacious
addition to the Washington’s social scene.

WHYDIDYOUCOMPETETOBEMISSDC?

Scholarship money. I made it through George Washington
University with a scholarship, student loans and working full-time
to pay my bills. I’d never done anything like this beforeso the Miss
America Pageant will be my second pageant ever. Every penny
from this will go towards loans and law school.
P HOTO BY JOSE PH AL L E N, OU TSIDE INN OCE NTS AT R ISK

WHAT’STHEISSUECLOSESTTOYOURHEART?

Helping, protecting and educating children. As Miss D.C. my
[cause] is human trafficking., and over 50 percent of victims are
children. In the D.C. metro area alone, human trafficking is a $100
million industry.
HOWCANWEHELPENDHUMANTRAFFICKING?

Become educated, raise awareness among others, learn to spot
the signs of possible trafficking, and support local NGOs like
Innocents at Risk and The Polaris Project.

FYIDC | THEINSIDER’SGUIDE

October Outings
New in Town
WHAT WOMEN WANT
Chevy Chase locals Chris Jacobs and
Julie O’Brien know what Washington
women are looking for and they’re letting
everyone in on their secrets with a new
Web site, WWWDCGIRLSINTHEKNOW
COM, the premier info spot for local deals
and happenings. From exclusive spa offers
to discounted designer handbags, these are
the Capital City’s new go-to girls.

Editor’s Pick
PROJECT IN PROGRESS
World-renowned artists Christo and JeanneClaude’s plans for their next endeavor will be on
display at THE PHILLIPS COLLECTION this
month in Christo and Jeanne-Claude: Over the
River, a Work in Progress.The exhibit documents
their strategy for suspending fabric over parts of
the Arkansas River during 2012 and includes over
200 sketches, photographs, and diagrams used in
preparation of a feat that will have been 16 years
in the making. It’s a must-see for anyone interested
in how this duo creates their amazing art projects.
October 11 to January 25. The Phillips Collection,
www.phillipscollection.org

Quotable
“When a diplomat says yes he
means perhaps; when he says
perhaps he means no; when he says
no he is no diplomat.”
- Anonymous

DC-ology
SUNDAY SPECIALS
Sunday is a great time to relax before the busy work week begins, so why not treat yourself to
brunch and a facial – all in one spot at the MANDARINORIENTALWASHINGTONDC

Hot Ticket
CRAZY FOR ‘KOOZA’
Experience the ultimate acrobatic performance
with Tapis Rouge VIP tickets to Cirque du Soleil’s
latest show, “KOOZA” when it bounces, tumbles,
and swings into town. Enjoy the best seats, along
with access to the Tapis Rouge suite before the
show and during intermission for food, wine, and
desserts. Be prepared for an evening of extreme
flexibility, unimaginable strength, and aweinspiring tricks. The Plateau at National Harbor,
October 30 to November 30; 1-800-678-5440, www.
cirquedusoleil.com

The menu at Café MoZU is sure to get guests out of bed.

Spend Sundays rejuvenating from weekend festivities.

CAFÉMOZU

THESPAATMANDARINORIENTAL

Indulge in the new Bubbles and Brunch
menu, which includes a variety of traditional
seasonal items infused with Asian and
European flavors. Patrons also receive two
complimentary glasses of champagne with
brunch. Now that’s something to toast! 202787-6868, www.cafemozu.com

After lunch, visit the spa for its new Vitamin
Infusion Facial, which uses Somme Institute’s
patented formula to help revive sun-damaged
skin. Skin analysis, hydrating collagen mask,
and a facial massage are included in this custom
treatment. 202-787-6100, www.mandarinoriental.
com/washington

by the numbers
250,000

$740

Square feet of China’s
new embassy on
International Drive
N.W.; the largest in
the city.

Cost (in millions)
to build the U.S.
embassy in Iraq.

21.88
Years Prince Bandar
bin Sultan served as
ambassador of Saudi
Arabia, the longest
term in Washington.

7
Bedrooms in the British
ambassador’s residence, all
of which are named after
former envoys.

Sources: McClatchyDC, Embassy of Denmark, Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia, British Embassy in the United States

Foodies Only
SOUND BITES
• REDWOODRESTAURANT is enjoying its first autumn in Bethesda with new
outdoor seating. Guests can enjoy the weather while they eat, or dine in the chic
modern interior on mid-Atlantic cuisine by executive chef Andrew Kitko. 301656-5515, www.redwoodbethesda.com
• TOSCA owner PAOLOSACCO is looking forward to the opening of POSTO
at the old VIRIDIAN space on 14th Street, between Q and P streets NW. With
Tosca chefMASSIMOFABBRI in charge, the new Italian trattoria is scheduled
to open its doors later this month.
• According to those close to the deal, reality TV star GORDONRAMSAY is “all but
certain” to be taking control of the kitchen at the former MAESTRO space in the Ritz
Carlton at Tysons Corner.We hope he leaves his Hell-ish antics out of this kitchen.

FYIDC | SOCIALCALENDAR
Visit Washingtonlife.com’s online calendar for
information about local benefits and galas. You can
post your event online, where it will be considered for
our print edition and annual Balls and Galas Directory.

OCTOBER
ARTSFORTHEAGINGGALA

04

AFTA celebrates its first two decades
with cocktails, dinner, and the
presentation of the first Lolo Sarnoff Award
to legendary pianist Irving Fields. This year’s
chairmen are Giorgio and Anna Maria Via
and Steven and Julie Hopping. Organization
of the American States; 7:30 p.m.; $250, AFTA
members; $300, non-members; $500 and $750,
VIP; black-tie; contact Janine Tursini, 301-7184990, info@aftaarts.org
CAPITALHOSPICEGALA

Chaired by Wendy Adeler-Hall, this
years Passion for Caring Gala features
cocktails, dinner, dancing, and silent
and live auctions with an Argentine
SPONSORED
theme, under the patronage of the
Argentine Ambassador Jose Octavio Bordon.
National Building Museum; 6:30 p.m.; $500,
sponsorships and young donors rates available; blacktie; contact 703-531-6216

Director Martin Scorcese and actress Ellen Pompeo after receiving their awards
at last year’s National Italian American Foundation gala. (Photo by Tony Powell)

The PAHC presents “Our Future
In Focus,” an exhibition of more
than 100 black and white photographs
by Distr ict children and teens living
with AIDS and HIV. The event includes
a reception and silent auction. Historical
Society of Washington, D.C.; 6 p.m.; cocktail;
$125; contact 202-347-5366
THETHANNUALMERIDIANBALL

The evening begins with preball dinners at various diplomatic
residences and continues at
Meridian House for desserts, drinks
SPONSORED
and dancing. The chairmen are Nels
and Kristen Olson, Marcelle Leahy, and Patricia
McKeon. Diplomatic residences and Meridian
House; 6 p.m.; black-tie; $600 for diplomatic
dinner and ball; $350 for White-Meyer dinner and
ball; contact: Leonor Chiarella, 202-939-5574,
lchiarel@meridian.org

The Washington theater community
gathers to raise funds for the Boys and
Girls Club and programs fostering
theater in inner-city schools. The Four
SPONSORED
Seasons Hotel; 7:30 p.m.; black-tie;
$250; contact Celeste Gilbert, 202-337-4572

More than 35,000 spectators will gather
at Great Meadow near The Plains,
Va., for a full day of entertainment, including
a Porsche classic car display, seven nationally
sanctioned steeplechase races, and terrier and
pony races.Ticket sales benefit the Great Meadow
Foundation, which is dedicated to the preservation
of Great Meadow’s open space for community
use. The Plains,Va.; 1 p.m.; ticket prices vary based on
location and parking; contact 540-347-2612

This event, celebrating its 20th year,
will be held for the last time at the
Potomac, Md. estate of Sargent
and Eunice Shriver, where Sheikha
SPONSORED
Mozah Bint Nasser Al-Missned of
Qatar will receive the organization’s Spirit of
Leadership Award. 9109 Harrison Dr., Potomac,
Md., 6:30 p.m.; black-tie; sold out, tables of 10
available at $10,000; contact Hilary Stephens,
202-824-0349, HilaryStephens@bestbuddies.org

For one week each year, the area
around the Verizon Center is
transformed into a home away
from home for equine athletes, who
SPONSORED
compete in the more than 50 different
classes throughout the week. Highlights include
Sunday’s showjumping grand prix and the
“Cowboy Party” to benefit Autism Speaks.The
Verizon Center; classes all week, visit www.wihs.org

WL

THEFIRSTANNUALJOANHISAOKA
“MAKEADIFFERENCE”GALA

This first-time event honors the life
of late public relations executive Joan
Hisaoka with proceeds benefiting
Smith Farm Center for the Healing
SPONSORED
Arts, a non-profit that supports those
living with cancer. The Ritz-Carlton, Washington,
D.C.; 6 p.m.; black-tie; $500; contact: Jacquelyne Willis,
202-741-1288, jwillis@websterconsulting.com

WL

CORCORAN
SOCIETYFALLFÊTE

The theme for this well-attended
young donors event is “Party with
the Power Players,” in honor of the
Corcoran’s latest exhibit, Richard
SPONSORED
Avedon: Portraits of Power. Corcoran
Gallery of Art; 7:30 p.m.; black-tie; $80 to $200;
contact: 202-639-1753, 1869society@corcoran.org

WL

Gwen Holliday and Nina Boggs with Richard and Lucille
Huber at the 2007 Meridian Ball. (Photo by Kyle Samperton)

24

SHAKESPEARETHEATRECOMPANY
HARMANCENTERFORTHEARTSGALA

27

This year’s theme, “A Night in Verona,”
is inspired by the theater’s current
production of Romeo and Juliet and will feature
star turns by noted actors, dancers and musicians.
Sidney Harman Hall and the National Building
Museum; 6 p.m., reception; 7 p.m., performance; 9 p.m.,
dinner and dancing; black-tie; $1,000 and up; contact
Joanne Coutts, 202-547-3230, ext. 2330; jcoutts@
shakespearetheatre.org

Fresh off the Milan runways, the
latest looks from the fashion gurus
at MaxMara will be on display at this special
trunk show. Prosecco and canapés will be
served courtesy of Famoso and M Café. The
Collection at Chevy Chase; 5471 Wisconsin
Ave., Chevy Chase, Md.; 12-2 p.m.; Contact
301-656-0581
CHILDREN’SNATIONALMEDICALCENTER
CAREFORKIDSEVENTATMAZZA

Relations, was 48 when she lost her battle with cancer
on May 14, 2008. Joan was a hard working and dedicated
leader who brought kinetic energy and bright imagination
to her work. The Gala will honor Joan’s life, her spirit of
compassion, and her unwavering commitment towards
bettering the lives of others.

For more information about the First Annual Joan
Hisaoka “Make a Difference” Gala Benefiting Smith Farm
Center for Healing and the Arts, sponsorship details, or to
purchase tickets, please contact Jacquelyne Willis at
202-741-1288 or jwillis@websterconsulting.com.
Smith Farm Center for Healing and the Arts is a Washington, DC based
non-profit 501(c)(3) health, education and creative arts organization that
serves individuals living with cancer and other serious illnesses.

MUY CALIENTE! That’s the idea when it comes to the
National Hispanic Foundation for the Arts’ annual gala, the
culmination of a series of glamorous events that consistently
draws an A-List crowd of Hispanic actors, personalities, and
community members to support Latino graduate students in the
arts. Aer a spicy dinner, and between awards presentations,
the well-dressed revelers danced to Latin super-star Willy
Chirino’s band. THE GUESTS Norman Dreyfuss, Secretary
Carlos and Edie Gutierrez, Bacardi’s Kristin Bodenstedt,
Joseph Warren, Bob Ghafouri, Julia Ehrgood, Ford Motor Co.’s
Raquel “Rocky” Egusquiza, and American Airlines Juan Rios.

THESCENE Noche de Gala may have come to
a close, but Reston Limo was waiting to transport
guests, including actors Jimmy Smits, Efren
Ramirez, and Aimee Garcia, to Gazuza, where
the party kept going at a WL-hosted aerparty.
Big names socialized with guests at the bar, and
everyone enjoyed Bacardi mojitos in the posh
lounge and spacious patio, where the scent of
hookah smoke ďŹ lled the late-summer air. THE
GUESTS Actor Diane Minshall, Becca Glover
and Pepper Watkins, Jessica Rich, Kristen
Cook, Jessica Rich, and Jessica Gibson.

22 West -The Residences
EASTBANC INC., THE DEVELOPER OF 3303 WATER STREET,
ONCE AGAIN HAS RAISED THE BAR FOR DESIGN &
ELEGANCE WITH THE COMPLETION OF 22 WEST-THE
RESIDENCES. THIS 92 UNIT MASTERPIECE IS LOCATED
IN WASHINGTON, DC’S EXCLUSIVE WEST END, THE
PREMIER LOCATION FOR DISCERNING CLIENTS SEEKING
ELEGANCE

AND

SOPHISTICATED

STYLE.

where design
and location

DESIGNER

MODELS ARE OPEN & THE BUILDING IS COMPLETE &
READY FOR MOVE-IN. PRICES RANGE FROM THE

MID

meet

$700,000 TO $4M. THE SALES CENTER IS LOCATED
ONSITE. PLEASE CALL TO SCHEDULE AN APPOINTMENT.

already raised $375,000 this year, and its goal of providing
legal services to children and families in need, as well as
to recognize the generous contributions of the Freddie
Mac Foundation and, most poignantly, the late, beloved,
Georgetown pediatrician Dr. Franklin L. Stroud, who
received the 2008 Distinguished Child Advocate Award.
THE SCENE Guests enjoyed the beautiful weather on
the roof terrace, a hearty Tuscan buﬀet, and dancing to
‘20s and ‘30s jazz by the Red Hot Rhythm Chiefs. THE
GUESTS Michael Morrell, Shay Miller, Jeremy Cook,
Nancy and Bill Baer, Pai Cummings, and Pam Howard.

THEEVENT Sheila Johnson and Bill Newman’s Hunt Countrystyle picnic “to celebrate the great work of Sibley Memorial
Hospital.” THESCENE Equinox chef Todd Gray fired up the grills
to provide BBQ favorites for patrons of Sibley’s Nov. 1 Celebration
of Hope & Progress Gala at the Four Seasons amid general
enthusiasm about raising funds for the Sullivan Center for Breast
Health and a new facility, expected to open in 2013, that will feature
individual patient rooms and expanded emergency care facilities.

Frank Mars

Prem Devadas

Monica and John Thompson

Jim Abdo and Stuart Haney

Graciela Adeler, Valentina Adeler
Armour, and Wendy Adeler Hall

36

Laurie and Michael Farr

Susan Mars and Annie Totah

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

Equinox Chef Todd Gray
and Giardy Ritz

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

THE WILLARD
IN TERCON TINEN TA L ,
W HER E GR E AT
MEETINGS H A PPEN.

From small meetings to large conferences, breakfasts to banquets, the Willard InterContinentalÂŽ always makes a good
impression. With a location in the heart of D.C., this magnificent Washington landmark provides an inspiring setting
for any gathering. Whatever your needs, our professional staff will ensure that every detail goes smoothly. At the Willard
InterContinental, every event is a special one.

: The opening of Richard Avedon: Portraits of Power, celebrating the
famed photographerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s portraits of the power elite from the 1950s until his
death in 2004. IN FOCUS: Viewers marveled at the 200-plus iconic works at
the PNC Financial Services Group-sponsored aďŹ&#x20AC;air while vying to chat with
Avedon subjects who were there, including civil rights leader Julian Bond,
feminist Eleanor Smeal, Rep. John Lewis, journalist Ben Bradlee and activist/
lawyer Jamie Raskin. Renata Adler and Nina Auchincloss Straight hosted
the post-opening dinner for 40 special pals at the Cosmos Club.

Julian Bond, Bob Zellner, and Dorothy Miller Zellner

LIFE
WL EXCLUSIVE

ofthe

PARTY

Regina Stettinius, Martha Webb, Joseph Stettinius, and Andy Kameros

WELCOME BACK PARTY
Calvin and Jane Cafritz Residence, Georgetown
PHOTOSBYKYLESAMPERTON

DÉJÀVUAGAIN The Cafritzes’ September soirée to welcome the social set back
from summer break is now an “oﬃcial Washington tradition.” Where beer to catch
up with friends you haven’t seen since the Opera Ball — unless, of course, you saw
them all on Martha’s Vineyard or Nantucket? SINGINGINTHERAIN: Sturdy tents
and covered allées to shelter guests from gusty rain that mercifully passed earlier
that day; lively dance music from a swing band; opera and Broadway faves sung by
Domingo-Cafritz Young Artists; and some lively political chat in a few quieter corners.
SPOTTED Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Susan Eisenhower, and envoys from Japan,
Colombia, Britain, France, Denmark, Hungary, Morocco, Finland, Malta and Peru.

Jane Cafritz with
Alma and Joe Gildenhorn

David Townsend and Kathleen Kennedy Townsend
with Ann and Thomas Friedman

James Billington, Calvin Cafritz, and Austin Kiplinger

Mae Haney Grennan and
Vernon Jordan

THE WASHINGTON
I N T E R N AT I O N A L
HORSE SHOW
Witness what 50 years of equestrian history has built. Splendor
in the breathtaking beauty of magnificent four-legged athletes.
Stimulate your senses with unparalleled show-stopping action.

TheNexusofPolitics﹐Hollywood﹐Media﹐andDiplomacy|Insider’s Convention Party Hopping, Nicola Sexton, and a Presidential Face-off

Director Stuart Townsend, Charlize Theron, and Public Citizen’s Lori Wallach at
the Impact Film Festival premiere of the festival’s featured narrative film Battle
in Seattle. The festival was a four-day event held during the 2008 Democratic
and Republican Conventions. (Photo by Lori Salvo)

his year at the Democratic and
Republican conventions, Jamie
Shor, Jody Arlington, and I
produced the Impact Film Festival
(IFF). Together with programming director
Rachel Goslins, we screened socially-themed
narrative and documentary films for audiences in
Denver and St. Paul and were fortunate to have
the following directors in attendance: Stefan
Forbes (Boogieman), Susan Koch (Kicking It), Mary
Lambert (14 Women), Tia Lesson and Carl Deal
(Trouble the Water), Jessica Gerstle (Accidental
Advocate), Timothy Greenfield-Sanders (The
Blacklist), Irena Salina (FLOW), Stuart Townsend
(Battle in Seattle), and Patrick Creadon – with his
timely I.O.U.S.A.
We closed the event with a special screening
of Robert Kennedy Remembered. Academy Award
winning director Davis Guggenheim (An
Inconvenient Truth) introduced the film on behalf of
his late father, Charles Guggenheim, who directed
it in 1968. It was a moving experience to see the
film with Ethel Kennedy, Kerry Kennedy, and
other members of the Kennedy family. Grace
Guggenheim, the daughter of the director, was in
attendance as well as Elizabeth Shue (wife of Davis
Guggenheim) and her brother Andrew.
The Democratic Convention began with Sen.
Ted Kennedy’s powerful address to the delegates
on Monday night. It was his first public appearance
since his illness and his speech was not to be missed.
The evening concluded with a special address by

42

Michelle Obama who presented herself in the
tradition of Jackie Kennedy. Each evening built
upon the next with Tuesday’s highlight being Sen.
Hillary Rodham Clinton’s passionate endorsement
of Sen. Barack Obama and Wednesday’s being vice
presidential nominee Joe Biden and his inspiring
life story.
Many of the events during the week were festive
occasions celebrating art, music, film, and diversity
and prompted discussion on issues impacting
American families.
For me the week started on a magical note with
a concert and rally at Red Rocks, and powerful
performances by Sheryl Crow, Sugarland, and
Dave Mahews. Environmental activist Laurie
David hosted with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and
Gov. Tim Kaine of Virgina speaking to crowds of
delegates, activists and members of Congress.
Monday night’s parties featured all-star line-ups
of musicians focusing on youth activism and voter
registration. Rock the Vote’s Ballot Bash was held
at the historic Denver Opera House and included
performances by Fall Out Boy, NERD, and Jakob
Dylan. Ashlee Simpson (her sister Jessica is a
rumored McCain supporter) stayed backstage for
most of the night to support her new husband,
Fall Out Boy bass player Pete Wentz. Also on
Monday night, Headcount hosted a moving and
fun-filled event with Robert Randolph and the
Family Band.
The Common Good/Hispanic Institute panel
and party with Patricia Duﬀ, New Mexico Gov.

Bill Richardson, and Chevy Chase and the salute
to the Screen Actors Guild hosted by IFF and
MySpace were the highlights of Tuesday. Grammy
Award winning artist Nelly rocked the house until
the wee hours. His girlfriend Ashanti made a
surprise appearance to sing a duet. ArcheDream for
Humankind opened the evening with a spectacular
dance show. Superstar actress Charlize Theron and
her longtime boyfriend Stuart Townsend, Senator
Biden’s daughter Ashley, and Cindy Lauper were
there with the hundreds of delegates and Obama
supporters joining in the fun.
Wednesday night featured the star-studded
IFF/Screen Actors Guild VIP dinner hosted by
Rob and Anna Hawken McKay, Phil and Tammy
Murphy, Julius Genachowski, and Rachel
Goslins. The posh setting, low lighting, and
celebrity-filled garden was unforgettable. The
final event was Thursday night at Invesco Field
where Sen. Obama accepted the Democratic
nomination for the presidency. The day was
unlike any other, starting with the actual journey
to the stadium. Some spectators arrived six hours
early to ensure admittance.
Once inside, the energy was indescribable.
We had entered the Super Bowl of politics.
Vendors sold buttons that simply said, “I was
there.” As Obama stepped on the stage to make
history, tens of thousands stood to their feet
and rejoiced. The crowd waved American flags
and proclaimed, “Yes we can!” I still get chills
thinking about it.

THE EVENT Washingtonians Megan Beyer, Debbie
Dingell, Rhoda Glickman, Ann Jordan, Debra Lee,
Hilary Rosen, and Elizabeth Stevens hosted a power
luncheon for over 150 friends on the last day of the
convention. Guests were thrilled for the reprieve from
the week’s hectic schedule of panels, meetings and
speeches before having to brave the 80,000-plus crowd
at Senator Obama’s acceptance speech.

Sherrie Westin and Katharine Weymouth

Lucy Cook, Charlie Cook and Meredith Harman

Toni Blash, Ruth Marcus and Ann Jordan

Irena Medavoy and Rita Franciosa

Amb. Wendy Sherman
and Hilary Rosen
Ke
Vicki Kennedy and Kerry

44

Ron Silver and Patricia Duﬀ

Betsy Myers

nnedy

Rhoda Glickman

Gov. Kathleen Sebelius
and Kathleen Kennedy
Townsend

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

Gustavo Paredes
NEED AND NEED
and Rep. Carolyn Maloney

Dan Abrams, Governor Bill Richardson and Richard Wolﬀe
WL SPONSORED

Markos Moulitsas
and Dee Dee Myers
Bob Hormats and Patricia Duﬀ

HISPANIC INSTITUTE
& COMMON GOOD
PANEL AND PARTY
Colorado Historical Society
PHOTOSBYPAULMAYNARDANDNISHANNALTCHAYAN

he conventions have come and gone. And what conventions they
were – each one making history in its own way, breaking records of
viewership, and animated by gripping political drama and intrigue.
As election day approaches, the suspense grows more and more palpable.
While opinion polls predict a cliffhanger, one thing is for sure: It is, above
everything else, about change.This is a theme that both parties trumpet as
loudly as they can, as the Bush administration draws to a close against the
backdrop of precarious economic and strategic challenges that loom large.
Politically, change is a positive theme presciently put forth by Barack
Obama and savily co-opted by John McCain, as they both jockey to
convince the American public that they have the right stuff to make good
on their promises and set the country back on the right course. One way
or another, the world will be a different place in a few weeks.
But in the current context, where the only kind of change we’re seeing

BARACK OBAMA

at this point is a worsening economy and festering global crises, whose
brand of change is more compelling? Are we in for continuous uncertainty
or are we going to be able to restore confidence in U.S. financial markets
and global leadership? Ultimately, will this change amount to more than old
style politics as usual? Will circumstances improve beyond the rhetoric and
campaign pledges? Which candidate is best suited to deliver constructive
solutions to the tough challenges that grip the nation?
Each side has received a lot of advice recently on how to steer its campaign
toward victory. But at the end of the day, the American people are the ones
voting, and the ones whose futures are at stake. So now may be the time for
a little advice to us, the voters, on how to consider this election. With this
in mind, Washington Life decided to touch base with some of the best and
brightest local minds on both sides of the aisle to see what they have to say to
the American public as it ponders its options on November 4th.

JOHN MCCAIN

SUSANEISENHOWER
President of the Eisenhower Group

NANCYZIRKIN
Democratic strategist

MIKEMURPHY
Republican political consultant

“He has the right temperament to be
president; he is a good listener and a
man who keeps his cool under pressure.
He will bring to the job vitality, intellect,
and a capacity to unite all segments of
Amercan society.”

“Voters should think about what Karl
Rove once said: ‘That as people do
beer, they start voting like Republicans.’
Given the year we’ve had, I expect a
lot of people – well oﬀ or not – will be
thinking about voting Democratic.”

“Any voter trying to judge the
candidates should look through the
cloud of promises and ﬁnd out this
from each: What is the one thing they
want to accomplish that they are truly
willing to take real political pain over.”

DEBRALLEE
Chairman and CEO, BET Networks

HAROLDFORD
Chairman DLC

MANDELLOURISMAN
Ourisman Automotive Group

“We can’t continue to Band-Aid
situations that require transplant surgery.
Obama is a leader who is ready to make
the bold moves necessary for change. ”

“The question is this, do we want 90
percent of the last eight years for the next
four years, or do we want a 100 percent
break from the past eight years.”

“He is a great American hero who has
the experience and strength to deter
terrorists from aacking us. And I like
his ticket.”

48

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

GAHLHODGESBURT
International Republican Institute
board of directors
“John McCain is a man of unimaginable
courage and humility. These qualities
led him to take courageous stands on
issues of monumental consequences to
this country — including calling for ‘more
boots on the ground, immediately’ ﬁve
years ago in reference to the Iraq war.”

e hottest ticket at the GOP
Convention was a floor pass for
the night of Alaska Gov. Sarah
Palin’s speech, which levitated
the Xcel Center from her first syllable to
her last. Everyone (including the press)
was mesmerized by this formidable, folksy
woman’s demeanor and rhetoric. Even the
toughest political operatives were astounded
that she could be so hard-hitting, humorous
and attractive – all in the same speech. No
matter what your politics might be, Palin’s
performance was unparalleled in the history
of U.S. politics.
The second hottest ticket was for
McCain’s acceptance speech, which played
better on television than it did in the hall. He
chronicled his life’s achievements and travails
with personal grace and eloquence, but the
audience was so enamored and keyed up that
their over-exuberant applause sometimes
broke the rhythm of his speech.
Convention week was a blur of business
cards pressed into new acquaintance’s hands
and all-too-brief glimpses of old friends. The
Distilled Spirits Council’s Monday party was
the most comfortable, chic and chatty with
Rudy Giuliani, NBC’s Norah O’Donnell and
The New York Times’ David Brooks making
cameo appearances. Both the National Journal’s

50

Ron Silver and Patricia Duﬀ
Jon Voight

VIP Viewing Room and the Bipartisan
Policy Council events were full of fascinating
characters. I’ll never forget sitting in a booth
at the National Journal lounge, watching Fred
Thompson give his speech; on one side of me
sat a dean of political journalism and on the
other a key Thompson campaign aide, both
shaking their heads in wonderment that this
former movie star had never been so dazzling
during his own run for president.
The Google/Vanity Fair party was a
luxurious and multi-layered extravaganza
with lobster, kobe beef, and a gorgeous
candy bar arrayed on different floors. This
was the one event the McCain staff was able
to attend in force. The congratulations they
received resounded all night, although Henry
Kissinger ended up getting more attention
than anyone else.
My most surreal convention experience
was walking out of the Hilton Hotel with my
friend, Dal LaMagna, just as McCain was to
about to arrive. Across the street was a large
Code Pink demonstration. Dal is a prominent
supporter of the antiwar movement, among
many other causes. The thicket of antiMcCain signs and pink hats erupted in shouts
as we walked over and disappeared into crowd.
They all were delighted to see him (me less

so), but as I knew many of the women
from Washington dinner parties, we
hugged our way through the crowd. It was
certainly strange for me, a former aide to
Jesse Helms, Phyllis Schlafly, Dan Quayle, Bill
Kristol, Steve Forbes, and Dick Cheney, as
well as a current colleague of John Ashcro
and die-hard McCain supporter, to end up
air-kissing my way through a pack of antiwar
protestors, but then politics is all about strange
bedfellows, right?
E

In order to win a college scholarship, Sarah Palin took
part in several beauty contests, winning the crown of Miss
Wasilla in her home town in 1984 before ﬁnishing second
in the Miss Alaska contest. Miss Wasilla went on to study
journalism in college and worked on a ﬁshing boat before
settling on a life in politics.

DFOUFSforMBTFSTVSHFSZtXBTIJOHUPO
ED
The Center for Laser Surgery is the largest
Botox and Injectable Filler practice
in the Mid-Atlantic region.
The most advanced injection techniques
available and our economical prices
are just some of the reasons why more
people choose the Center for Laser Surgery
for their Botox and Filler Treatments.

verything about the dinner had to
be absolutely 110 percent fantastic.
First and foremost, I needed to look
amazing, which I did, in my most
conservative, but still va-va-va-voom, black silk
YSL suit accessorized with a stunningly bright
turquoise Hermes scarf, since I’m Southern
and able to pull off risky wardrobe choices
with my colorful bursts of personality.
Second and even more important, my staff
needed sharp eyes, fast hands, and tip-tip-tippy
toes. Majority Leader Ivy’s historic three-story
brownstone was not only filled to the gills
with one hundred of my top-tier Team Victory
donors, it was also bursting at the seams with
irreplaceable antiques collected by his refined,
intelligent, and Parisian wife, Genevieve.
Third and most critical of all, I needed happy
donors. A happy donor equaled cash money
green. An unhappy donor equaled bye-bye
Senate seat. These Team Victorys hadn’t ponied
up fifty grand per couple just to meet Majority
Leader Ivy or his wife. Most already knew the
six most powerful senators, those in Leadership,
I’d secured specifically for the evening. They
weren’t even there to chat up the President.
No, my Team Victorys weren’t interested in
handshaking. They paid to see the house.
Donors will pay to see if there’s a hamper
with dirty clothes and will do everything in
their power to sneak a glance at that marital
bed. Nosy, nosy, nosy. Since taking the job that
catapulted my career from little old me to Big
Money Babe, I’d become D.C.’s version of
Robin Leach, offering check-writers a glimpse
of the Republican Senate’s “champagne wishes
and caviar dreams.” For a hefty price, of course.

54

Nicole Sexton’s Party Favors is a fictionalized
account of her experience as one of the
GOP’s most well-connected insiders.

Big bucks meant big donors expected
big parties to big-time rock – there’d better
be A-list entertainment, free-flowing topshelf booze, plentiful hors d’oeuvres plus a
catered sit-down dinner, unfettered access
to politicians, and there absolutely, no doubt
about it, had to be a click line. Because clicks
are donor crack.
Every donor, no matter the size of their
wallet, wants a picture of themselves smiling
with Someone Important. The click line
itself is just a cleaned-up carnie trick, a
frenetic hurricane of pushing and smiling
and shaking and flashing and clicking and
pulling and pushing and smiling until every
last donor has had their twelve seconds with
a Hot Shot. It’s ludicrous. Not the slightest
bit glamorous. And yet, if I’d ever even
suggested throwing a fundraiser in D.C. sans
click line, I would have been run out of
town as a heretic.

I’d vetoed the conventional, tacky blue
velour pipe-and-drape backdrop and opted
instead to put Majority Leader Ivy and
Genevieve in the library on a toe mark in
front of mahogany shelves filled with leatherbound tomes. My donors were beyond happy.
They were click-crack wild, high from the
unprecedented inner-sanctum access. Their
clicks would appear more personal, more
intimate, more real. They’d nonchalantly prop
the photos on baby grand pianos, on mantles
beside the obligatory posed “whole family
wearing white on a Cape Cod beach” shot as
if Ivy and his wife were just that: family. This
was overdose material.
Despite the increasingly claustrophobic
conditions my party was running like a
well-oiled machine. I flitted about the room
making sure donors had drinks, staffers were
strategically placed, and the senators were
schmoozing with civilians and not one another.
All I needed was for President Gray to arrive.
Where, oh where, was my little Gray Two?
Then, in a shuffle so swift I had no time to
yelp, Advance jostled me backwards and slid
the pocket door in front of me entirely shut. I
spun to find myself tit-to-tat with Gray Two,
the pocket door behind him already closed.
And tit-to-tat isn’t easily done with me.
Though petite in stature, I am, as Mom politely
describes in mixed company, “generously
endowed.”
From the light spilling under the doors,I could
see President Gray smiling his shocking white
toothy grin. He snickered nervously through his
veneers, as seemingly startled by our inadvertent
“Seven Minutes in Heaven” as I was.

The Buddy System
In twenty years, Best Buddies International has grown from Georgetown
to across the world to help persons with intellectual disabilities
BY CARL LEWIS

T

his month marks the end of
one of Washington’s most
notable and inspiring events
– the annual BESTBUDDIES
BALL held at the residence of Sargent and
Eunice Shriver, the parents of Best Buddies
International founder and chairman,
Anthony Kennedy Shriver.
For 20 years, the Shriver family has
been welcoming guests into their home to
celebrate the many achievements of this
important organization and to raise the
funds that allow Best Buddies to expand
within the United States and throughout
the world. I am proud to be considered
one of those friends and honored to have
attended numerous balls.
When my friend Anthony started Best
Buddies in 1989, he had the simple but
revolutionary idea that by tapping into
the tremendous volunteer potential of his
fellow university students, he could create an
organization that would expand the realm of
opportunities that persons with intellectual
disabilities should experience. Back then,

Above: Carl Lewis and actor Greg German with
representatives from Best Buddies Germany at the 2007
Best Buddies Ball.

Anthony inspired his college peers to get
involved. Today, he continues to inspire
countless people around the world to spread
his message of friendship and support.
Over the past two decades, I have watched
Best Buddies International grow to include
over 1,400 programs on school and
university campuses around the world.
Best Buddies International is comprised
of six programs: Best Buddies Middle
Schools, High Schools, Colleges,
Citizens, e-Buddies and Jobs – that
have a positive impact on individuals,
families and communities. We have an
active and involved board of directors,
of which I am a member.
Best Buddies International not
only reaches each of the 50 states, the
organization has now expanded into 40
countries across six continents.
As I travel, I am constantly reminded
of
the important role Best Buddies plays
Guests at the 18th Annual Best Buddies Ball
in providing opportunities for one-to-

56

one friendships and integrated employment.
I have had the chance to meet with Buddies
from around the globe and hear stories of
how important an association with Best
Buddies has been for them.
But through all of the growth, the
international expansion and the development
of new initiatives, the Best Buddies Ball at
the Shrivers’ home has remained an event
that brings together friends and supporters
to acknowledge the success Best Buddies has
achieved in enhancing the lives of people
with intellectual disabilities.
The Best Buddies Ball has generated
tremendous resources — $35 million since
its inception. This year’s event aims to
raise $3 million, funds that will be used to
encourage friendships, create jobs and expand
Best Buddies International into parts of the
world greatly in need of compassion and
understanding.
Although this year’s celebration marks
the end of an important era, the ball will
continue, albeit in another manifestation.
Knowing firsthand the drive and the
innovative thinking of Anthony Kennedy
Shriver, I am certain it will be a spectacular
event wherever it is held.
Best Buddies International has positively
impacted more than 350,000 participants
this year alone, and with ambitious plans for
expansion both domestically and globally, this
is surely just the beginning of many great
friendships to come.

SAVE THE DATE

WL
SPONSORED

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

OCTOBER
The Best Buddies Ball
For more information contact Hilary
Stephens at 202-824-0349, or
hilarystephens@bestbuddies.org

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

POLLYWOOD | CHARITYSPOTLIGHT

Joy to Children
Starlight Children’s Foundation MidAtlantic brightens the lives of seriously ill children and their families
BY JEFFREY ZELL

I

magine being eight years old and
in the hospital.You hear your mom
whispering to the doctor and he
says it’s “serious.” It’s frightening,
it’s foreign and it’s very lonely. All these
strangers come in and out of your room,
poking and prodding. Needles. Machines.
You should be in your 3rd grade classroom,
learning multiplication and playing on the
monkey bars during recess. Instead, you’re
stuck in the hospital.
Now, imagine how you feel when
the nurse gives you a teddy bear to hug
or brings video games to your bedside.
You start being less worried and the
time passes quickly. Even your dad laughs
when he’s playing Nintendo with you.
When magicians visit, you get to leave
your room and play for a little while. In
between hospital stays, you get to go to
special family events.
STARLIGHT CHILDREN’S FOUNDATION
MIDATLANTIC helps seriously ill children
and their families cope with pain, fear and
isolation through entertainment, education
and family activities. Our services are proven

to distract children from their pain, increase
their willingness to return for treatment, and
connect families facing similar challenges. We
currently reach over 18,000 children
a month in Washington, D.C.,
Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania,
Virginia and West Virginia.
We offer a comprehensive
menu of outpatient, hospital-based
and electronic programs that are
accessible constantly — before,
during, and after medical treatment.
Our featured programs are Fun
Centers (mobile entertainment
units); Great Escapes (family
activities like sporting events and
circuses); Hospital Happenings (inhospital parties with clowns or
crafts); PC Pals (child safe laptops);

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

and Starlight Sites (in-hospital teen
lounges and playrooms). My mission
as Starlight MidAtlantic’s president has
been to expand our services so that all
children in the region can find solace
during their medical ordeal.
The most popular program, Fun
Centers, features a Wii gaming system, a
DVD player, flat screen TV and are preloaded with games, movies and music.
Fun Centers provide hours of distraction
for children as they await surgery or
spend time with their families during
visiting hours. If a child is not bedridden,
the Wii also gets them moving as a form
of rehabilitation. Playing video games
together creates a bond between doctors
and young patients; instead of talking
over the child to a parent the doctor can
relate on a different level.
Our biggest fundraiser of the year, the
Ninth Annual Taste of the Stars, will take
place on Saturday, Nov. 22 at the Four
Seasons in Georgetown. Along with fellow
gala co-chairman Curtin Winsor, we are
excited to host the evening, which includes
live and silent auctions, a tasting of “Wines
From Around the World,” a gourmet dinner,
dancing and a cigar bar. Last year, Washington
Life called the event “One of the Most Lavish
Silent Auctions” in the Washington, D.C. area.
All of the gala proceeds support the programs
we provide for sick kids. Last year we raised
$650,000 and we hope to break that record

SAVE THE DATE

WL
SPONSORED

NOVEMBERND
Ninth Annual Taste of the Stars Gala
For more information about the
foundation or gala, visit
www.starlight-midatlantic.org

57

POLLYWOOD | CHARITYSPOTLIGHT

The Difference Maker
Remembering Joan Hisaoka in preparation for the first Annual Joan Hisaoka Gala
BY ANDREA ROANE

I

first did a profile of Joan Hisaoka in
March 2008 as part of a WUSA-9 feature
titled “Courage Collage.” She was well
known in the national capital region,
not only for promoting some of the finest
restaurants in town but also for her generous
and giving nature. Joan was named one of the
50 most powerful and influential women in
the District in 2004, when she received the
Washington Business Journal’s “Women Who
Mean Business Award.” She represented many
top hospitality, tourism and retail clients in the
metro area. I found her to be a courageous
and engaging personality, and one that will be
sorely missed.
Joan succumbed to cancer in May of this
year but her dedication and power to make
a difference lives on. To honor her memory, I
have agreed to serve as master of ceremonies
for the first annual JOANHISAOKA“MAKEA
DIFFERENCE”GALA on October 24, a black-tie
event chaired by her brother, Robert Hisaoka, to
raise funds for organizations that assist those living
with cancer.
This food-focused inaugural event will bring
together prominent personalities including sports
figures Art Monk, Charles Mann and Bobby
Mitchell; celebrity chefs Todd Gray, Roberto
Donna, Kaz Okochi, Michel Richard and Robert
Weidmaier; and executive committee members
Michael Ansari, Jack Davies, Leah Ganzler,
Richard Kay, Mario Marino, Faye Morrisee,
Gary Nakamoto, Richard Paerson and Steve
Schram, with upbeat dance tunes by Felix
Cavaliere’s Rascals. All proceeds will go to the

SAVE THE DATE

WL
SPONSORED

58

OCTOBER
First Annual Joan Hisaoka Gala
For information contact Jacquelyne
Willis at jwillis@weberconsulting.com

Smith Farm Center for Healing and the Arts, an
organization which shares Joan’s personal mission
of improving the lives of others during challenging
times.
In 1988, Joan founded Hisaoka Public Relations,
a boutique retail, tourism, and hospitality firm that
went on to receive the Public Relations Society
of America’s prestigious Silver Anvil Award under
her leadership. In addition to her professional
career, she served on the board of directors of
the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan
Washington, was instrumental in creating and
branding the “THE RAMMY” awards, and was
president of Les Dames d’Escoffier (where there
is also a scholarship in her name). In July 2008,
she was posthumously awarded the Community
Leadership Award at the Bobby Mitchell Hall of
Fame Golf Classic in recognition of her 16 years
of raising awareness and funds for the Leukemia
& Lymphoma Society.
Joan became involved with Smith Farm Center
after participating in a program at their facility

in Washington. Her experience with such
programs nationwide inspired her to become
a dedicated advocate for the power of art and
alternative healing for those living with cancer
and led her family to honor her legacy.
The JOANHISAOKAHEALINGARTS
GALLERY at Smith Farm Center has been
named in memory of Joan because of her
dedication to transform the experience of
cancer and other major health problems
by empowering individuals to make wise
decisions about their care and improving
the quality of their lives during such
challenging times. Since its founding in 1996
as a nonprofit health, education and creative
arts organization, Smith Farm Center
programs have positively transformed the
experience of living with serious illnesses –
for adults, their caregivers and the healthcare
professionals who support them.
Joan will be forever remembered for
her unending commitment, drive and true
compassion for others. Her legacy continues to
inspire others who are living with cancer.

enée Jones-Bos, the Netherland’s new
ambassador to Washington, hit the
ground running. During her first official
week on the job she presented her
credentials to President George
Bush on Wednesday along with other recent
arrivals. On Friday, there was a special meeting
of EU ambassadors on the situation in Iran,
and then later, at the week’s end, Jones-Bos
was in New York to help launch next year’s
400th anniversary celebrations of Henry
Hudson’s taking possession of Manhattan
Island for the Dutch.
Talleyrand, the consummate 19th century
diplomat, would probably not have considered
the latter worthy of his attention, but times have
changed. A century ago, a diplomat operated
according to the rules established by the Congress
of Vienna of 1814, which shaped political
Europe following the downfall of Napoleon
and remained in force with remarkably little
change until almost the end of the last century.
Today, says Pierre Vimont, France’s dapper, affable
ambassador, the diplomat’s horizons have to be
much wider. “You have to be knowledgeable
about so many issues besides politics; you have
to know about financial markets, climate change,
terrorism, defense, commerce.You are working in
a global environment in which issues, and different
decisions on those issues, are all interconnected.”
A changing role has dictated a change in
what recruiters look for in aspiring diplomats.

There is less emphasis on table manners and
skill at reversing in the waltz and more, much
more, on a good grasp of international affairs
and global economics. A knowledge of French
– once the indispensable language of diplomacy

– might still come in handy, but fluency in
Mandarin or Arabic is now the golden key to
the door of a diplomatic career.
In the age of the internet and the cell
phone, a mental, strategic, and political agility
is another must. “We are making decisions in
real time,” says Elena Poptodorova, Bulgaria’s
departing (in October) woman in Washington.
Time was when an ambassador waited for
days for instructions from his government
to arrive in the diplomatic pouch. The good
news today is, as one foreign ambassador put it,
“you don’t have to make it up.You really know
[because] you’re in constant communication
with your capital.” The bad news: the curse of
the Blackberry. Home capitals can find their
diplomats anywhere, at any time.
The frequently asked question is whether
the speed of communication and the ability
of leaders to talk direct or video-conference
with their counterparts, plus the advent of
world-wide, 24-hour news cycles, has removed
the need for expensive embassies – made
them “relics of the days of sailing ships,” as
independent presidential candidate Ross Perot
once put it (he wanted to abolish them).
Speed and technology have certainly
transformed the way diplomats do business; but
relics? At their best, they provide the quality
and context without which information
delivered fast has little merit. While CNN
reports the news faster than any embassy can,

“YOU HAVE TO BE KNOWLEDGEABLE ABOUT SO
many issues besides politics; you have to know about financial markets, climate change, terrorism, defense, commerce.”
Pierre Vimont, Ambassador of France

60

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| S E P T E M B E R | washingtonlife.com

“governments these days rely on you for an
accurate assessment of what the news means,”
Vimont says. “They already have the facts.
What they want is to have them placed in
context.” Besides, as the anonymous diplomat
quoted earlier pointed out, an ambassador
“tries to involve himself in the decisionmaking process before the decision is taken.”
Once CNN has the story, the diplomat’s room
to maneuver becomes limited.
And an ambassador can still argue with
considerable justification that despite the changes,
the essentials remain the same. “My role is to
promote my country to the United States in its
entirety,” says Estonia’s Vaino Reinart.
Sir Christopher Meyer, the genial former
British ambassador, was even – typically – more
blunt. In his revealing memoirs, D.C. Confidential,
Meyer declares,“An ambassador and an embassy
exist to advance the national interest.There is no
other justification for their existence. Stripped to
its core, this means safeguarding British security
and British prosperity.”
This multi-purpose activity has taken many
forms. For a long time, the British Embassy
had a diplomat whose main job was to lobby
members of a congenitally pro-Irish Congress
on London’s perspective on Northern Ireland.
For years, the embassy successfully blocked
Sinn Fein leader Jerry Adams’s yearly efforts to
obtain a U.S. visa. More recently, the embassy
persuaded the administration to postpone
the introduction of biometric passports until
Britain was ready to issue them.
Poptodorova says the toughest task of her
five-year assignment was “to break down the
prejudice of some key members of Congress
against Bulgaria’s membership in NATO.” She
adds – “I recall Sen. [John] Warner telling me
to my face, ‘I don’t see any reason for enlarging
NATO, and still less for admitting Bulgaria
as a member.’ ” It took “different stages of
persuasion,” to get the skeptics to support
Bulgaria joining the Atlantic Alliance, but three
years later – in 2006 – no voice was raised
against the U.S.-Bulgarian bi-lateral defense
cooperation agreement that led to setting up
three U.S. military bases along Bulgaria’s Black
Sea coast.
All of which points to the intense
competition in the Washington diplomatic

ope Benedict XVI’s visit to the United States cast the media spotlight on a foreign
diplomat you won’t see at the Opera Ball. He is Archbishop Pietro Sambi, who
as the Vatican’s ambassador to Washington rejoices in the historic title of Apostolic
Nuncio. The United States has had full diplomatic relations with the Vatican (or, more
properly,The Holy See) since 1984, and the papal envoy combines the roles of diplomatic
representative to Washington and Rome’s liaison with the U.S. Catholic bishops.
Sambi, a genial Italian cleric with the build of a football quarterback, headed the
planning of Pope Benedict’s visit on the Vatican side, and played host to the pontiff at
the Apostolic Nunciature, the mansion that serves as both his residence and office on
Massachusetts Avenue N.W., directly opposite the Vice President’s official residence,
the former U.S. Naval Observatory. One of Mass Avenue’s unofficial landmarks is John
Woljnowski, the white haired protester who, day in and day out for the past decade or
so, has stood outside the nunciature carrying large signs inveighing against pedophile
priests.
Sambi is a senior member of the Vatican’s legendary diplomatic corps, one of the
oldest, largest and reputedly best informed in the world. Like all nuncios he has the
ecclesiastical rank of archbishop of a “titular see,” in his case Bellicastrum. A titular see
is a usually an ancient diocese, frequently situated in what is now Africa or the Middle
East, that no longer exists except in name.
Before his assignment to Washington in December 2005, Archbishop Sambi was
the Vatican representative in Jerusalem. In 2002, he made news headlines for his role
in bringing to an end the standoff between Israeli troops and a group of Palestinian
gunmen who had occupied the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem. The archbishop
was involved in the negotiations that led to the Palestinian ringleaders obtaining safe
conduct out of the church and being exiled to Europe.
A gregarious, friendly cleric, Sambi surveys the world with wry humor. Invited
recently to take part in a symposium on Pope Benedict’s book “Jesus of Nazareth” he
began his comments with, “It’s not easy to comment on a book written by the boss.”

| S E P T E M B E R | washingtonlife.com

61

SPECIAL FEATURE | ROLANDFLAMINI

Political appointee or not, is the charge of
environment. Twenty years ago there were in Washington has already visited California,
lying a bum rap? “We [diplomats] never admit
barely a hundred foreign embassies; today, Florida, Minnesota, Louisiana, and Illinois.
Like most of his colleagues, Reinart is that we lie, and that is a basic rule,” says Indian
the number has jumped to more than 200,
all vying for the attention and cooperation of one of his nation’s top diplomats. Which is Foreign Minister Shiv Shankar Menon, himself
the U.S. administration and the U.S. Congress. why foreign envoys raise a quizzical eyebrow a former ambassador to China and Israel. “But
“We are in the market like everybody else,” at the peculiar American practice of training more than that, falsehood or agreements based
Poptodorova adds. “When I try to measure diplomats to be ambassadors and then giving on falsehood just don’t work … pretty soon
my success I count the people whom I know the plum posts to political appointees with the falsehood will be exposed.”
More to the point, it’s a two-way street.
no training. Rarely does a professional U.S.
rather than the people who know me.”
Diplomats will point out in their own
To cover all the bases, foreign
defense that they are in any case as
ambassadors put a lot of effort into
much lied to by governments as lying.
cultivating as many contacts as their
Because it tends to be the pinnacle
entertainment budget accommodate. keep you busy seven days a week, but … you have to
of a diplomat’s career, the highAs a result, Washington’s embassies
have always been closely woven into reach out to the different states as often as you can.” powered life in Washington is often
Vaino Reinart, Ambassador of Estonia
followed by the anti-climactic calm
the capital’s social fabric: they are
of retirement. “You miss the diversity
part of its economy, its culture, and
of experience,” says Vimont, looking
they even provide some of its juicier
scandals. The constraints of more work and ambassador find himself in London, Paris, ahead, and “the excitement of being in foreign
tighter budgets have recently resulted in a or Rome. While foreign governments countries.”
And, of course, the perks of office. This
scaling down in embassy entertaining, but the appoint their most seasoned professionals
diplomatic party circuit remains an important to Washington, reflecting this country’s reporter once asked Sir Oliver Wright, a
importance, the U.S. – with varying results popular former British ambassador to the
component in Washington social life.
Ambassadors also spend more time on the – routinely sends businessmen and women United States, what his retirement was like.
road than they once did. “Washington can keep to key capitals with the sole qualification of His reply: “Last night my wife and I went to
you busy seven days a week, but in addition to having written a fat check to the president’s the theater. When we came out, it was raining,
the political engagement here, you have to reach election campaign. Their task – “to lie abroad people were scrambling for taxis. Then a big
out to the different states as often as you can,” for the good of their country,” as the famous Rolls-Royce drew up outside. But it wasn’t
for me.”
observed Estonia’s Reinart, who in his one year saying goes.

“WASHINGTON CAN

Left to right: It hasn’t been all cocktail parties for Elena Poptodorova, Bulgaria’s soon-to-depart ambassador who helped drum up support for her country’s inclusion into NATO
(Photo by Clay Blackmore); Former Russian Amb. Yuri Ushakov doubled as brand ambassador for Russian Standard Vodka at a 2007 event at his embassy; Maria Felice Mekouar and
Moroccan Amb. Aziz Mekouar with former British Amb. Sir David Manning at a 2006 Young Concert Artists benefit at the British embassy residence. (Photo by Kyle Samperton)

62

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| S E P T E M B E R | washingtonlife.com

Featuring Executive Chef Enzo Fragione

he moment you walk in, you know you’re in a hot zone.
Designed to capture the spirit of Venice with an innovative
and contemporary interpretation, the cuisine is an art form
with a flair for the dramatic and a taste for the adventurous.
Chef Fragione delights in creating what he describes as
“personalized Italian cuisine.”

Teatro is also available for private engagements. Book your
next corporate event or holiday party in one of our three
spacious dining rooms. Our media room now features sixtyfour person capacity, 106” HD projection screen, two HD
plasmas, wireless internet, laptop portals, wireless microphone,
and DVD. Open Monday through Saturday.

The elegant & romantic dinner atmosphere lends itself to
dolce memories, while the bar scene bristles with energy and
Washington’s power players.

FIRSTIMPRESSIONS
“WASHINGTON IS A CITY OF UNPARALLELED ENERGY,
AND I FELT IMMEDIATLEY AT HOME HERE…”

BY AMBASSADOR HOUDA NONOO OF BAHRAIN

68

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

PH OTO BY TONY P OWE L L

A

s I walked off the plane and took my first steps onto American soil as the
ambassador of the Kingdom of Bahrain to the United States, I began to realize
the enormity of my responsibility as the primary representative of my island nation’s
one million citizens to the most powerful country on earth.
Mine was not a traditional path to a diplomatic appointment as I spent most
of my career in the private sector before being appointed to the Shura Council
in 2006. When His Excellency Shaikh Khalid Bin Ahmed Bin Mohamed AlKhalifa, Bahrain’s minister of foreign affairs, asked me on behalf of His Majesty,
King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa, to serve as the Kingdom of Bahrain’s representative
to Washington, my first reaction was one of pure astonishment.
In addition to the honor of being appointed to represent Bahrain in the U.S.,
one of our closest allies and most important strategic partners, I was acutely aware
that my selection was a testament to the tremendous success of nearly a decadelong effort by the Bahraini government, under the leadership of His Majesty, to
encourage the full participation of women and people of all faiths in politics, and,
on a broader scale, the expansion of the roles of women across all sectors of Bahraini
society. When I presented my credentials to President Bush on July 28, 2008, I
became the third female ambassador in the history of Bahrain, the first woman
to be appointed ambassador to the United States from my country, and the first
Bahraini ambassador of Jewish descent in the world.These are tremendous honors,
and I hope to live up to the confidence my government has placed in me.
Coming from the private sector, I was accustomed to a fast paced, results-driven
work ethic, and this summer, as I was preparing to move to Washington, I tried to
mentally prepare myself for the transition to what I imagined might be a quieter,
more “diplomatic” schedule. Much to my delight, however, I learned in my first
few days that Washington is a city of unparalleled energy, and I felt immediately
at ease. Whether meeting with officials at the State Department or the Pentagon,
or discussing ways to expand U.S./Bahraini business partnerships in the Dulles
technology corridor, it seemed as though Washington was patting me on the back
and whispering “welcome home.”
Each day, I am both honored and humbled to help strengthen and maintain
the extraordinary relationship that exists between Bahrain and the United States.
The historic, political, economic and military ties between the two nations have
produced a wealth of bilateral achievements; most recently the signing of the U.SBahrain Free Trade Agreement.
In addition to representing my nation and my fellow citizens in the United States,
I am also excited at the prospect of sharing my country with America. Bahrain is
currently witnessing unprecedented reforms and economic development, and this
is a uniquely dynamic time in our history. I look forward to continuing the work
of my predecessors in the nation’s capital, and I am confident that this chapter in
my life will be one that I look back upon for inspiration long after I have left
Washington, D.C.

THEDIPLOMATSDANCE The Ambassadors Ball has long
been an informal “coming-out party” for newly arrived diplomats,
a major aﬀair with a lavish auction and a swing band aer dinner
to beneﬁt the Multiple Sclerosis Society. This year’s 30th annual
event honored Sens. Orrin Hatch and Byron Dorgan and Reps.
Russ Carnahan and Michael Burgess, and the diplomatic hosts
were Amb. Denis Antoine of Grenada, and Amb. LaCelia Aritha
Prince of St. Vincent and the Grenadines. THE GUESTS
Many of the city’s top diplomats, including ambassadors from
Afghanistan, Switzerland, Gabone, Trinidad and Tobago, Sri
Lanka, Lebanon, Liechtenstein, Hungary, Mexico, Swaziland,
and Luxembourg.

DIPLOMATIC DINNERS DON’T HAVE TO BE DAUNTING. THESE HELPFUL TIPS WILL HELP PUT FIRST-TIME GUESTS AT EASE:
1. BE PROMPT. Don’t inconvenience your hosts
by arriving too early or late, and be courteous
enough to leave on time.

the course of the meal, follow the lead of
the host or hostess when it comes to dinner
conversations. Ladies usually speak with
the gentleman on their left during the first
course and then switch to their right during
the second, etc.

2. DRESS APPROPRIATELY. Follow the dress
code on the invitation: black-tie, cocktail,
business, or informal/casual (which, by the
way, still means a jacket for men). If no attire
is mentioned, assume it is business.

8. PAY ATTENTION TO THE TOASTS. Listen
attentively while the hosts toast the guest of
honor and the guest of honor replies. Try
to resist the urge to add your own tributes
unless you are very well acquainted, or you
are invited to speak.

3. ONCE YOU’VE ARRIVED. A staff member will
greet you, offer to take your coat, and show
you where to freshen up.
4. GREETING THE HOSTS. If you are not
announced, introduce yourself when you are
greeted in the reception area. Exchange a
few words, but don’t monopolize their time,
especially if others are waiting.
Diplomatic dinner parties require guests to
be aware of certain rules of etiquette; they
also provide opportunities to meet major
power players. (Photos by Tony Powell)

5. BEVERAGES. A server will take your order
during the reception, which is usually only
long enough to consume one drink. When
it’s time for dinner, don’t take your glass with
you, as beverages will be served at table.

protocol and rank, so don’t get upset if you
are seated far from the hosts.

BE MINDFUL OF SEATING ARRANGEMENTS. Guests
are usually placed according to the rules of

7. REMEMBER, LADIES FIRST. As is customary,
ladies are seated before gentlemen. During

74

9. STAY FOR COFFEE. After dessert, the hosts
often will ask you to join them for coffee
and/or cordials in another room, and it’s
polite to stay for awhile. If your hosts are
smoking cigarettes or cigars after dinner, join
them if you wish. Otherwise, light up only
after you leave the premises.
10. SEND A THANK-YOU NOTE. Remember to
thank your hosts with a handwritten note
as soon as possible afterwards. Flowers and
other small gifts are not necessary but may be
appreciated.

THESE FORMER AMBASSADORS MAY HAVE MOVED ON FROM THEIR WASHINGTON POSTINGS, BUT THEIR WIDE CIRCLES
OF FRIENDS HAVEN’T FORGOTTEN THEM. HERE’S WHAT THEY’RE UP TO THESE DAYS:

78

His controversial memoir rocked political and
diplomatic circles in 2005, but former British
ambassador SIRCHRISTOPHERMEYER still has
plenty to say about the trans-Atlantic relationship,
most recently in a documentary he co-wrote and
presented, called Mortgaged to the Yanks. Meyer
also serves as the chairman of the British Press
Complaints Commission.

In May, 2007, JEAN-DAVID LEVITTE was
appointed diplomatic advisor to President Nicolas
Sarkozy, as well as the head of a National Security
Council which has yet to be finalized. Some
commentators look to Levitte’s role as a bellweather of Sarkozy’s previously stated intentions
to treat national security and foreign affairs as the
“reserved domain” of the presidency.

After leaving his post at the Swedish Embassy,
JANELIASSON served as president of the United
Nations General Assembly and Sweden’s minister
of foreign affairs. Eliasson is currently acting as
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon’s special
envoy to Darfur, Sudan, and whenever possible,
returns to his favorite spot, his country home on
Gotland, Sweden’s largest island.

Former Japanese Ambassador RYOZO KATO is
finally living his dream as commissioner of the
NPB, Japan’s professional baseball league. The
self-proclaimed “baseball nut” is working to
expand the sport’s popularity throughout Asia,
and leading talks with his U.S. counterparts in the
Major Leagues.

PRINCETURKIALFAISALALSAUD of Saudi
Arabia is currently the chairman of the King
Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies,
in Riyadh. Prince Turki left Washington abruptly
after only ten months in office, prompting
speculation about internal Saudi family politics.
He often returns to Washington to lecture at local
universities.

Famous for an unforgettable electric guitar jam on
The Colbert Report, former Hungarian ambassador
ANDRÁS SIMONYI is the chairman of Korda
Studios, the world’s largest filmmaking stage,
where Universal’s “Hellboy 2” was shot. A rock
‘n’ roll devote, Simonyi returned to Washington
last July to once again play with his band, “The
Coalition of the Willing” at Madam’s Organ.

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

SPECIAL FEATURE | DIPLOMATICSPOTLIGHT

ADEL AL-JUBEIR

THE (NOW) BEHIND THE SCENES DIPLOMAT
BY J O H N G R E E N YA

A

del al-Jubeir doesn’t get the easy jobs. But
the apparent ease with which he handles
them suggests that the still-new Saudi
Arabian ambassador, having shown he
can operate in the spotlight, is equally effective and
relaxed away from the glare in his new role as his
country’s point man in Washington.
When it was learned that 15 of the 19 terrorists
responsible for 9/11 were Saudi Arabian nationals,
al-Jubeir, then-foreign affairs advisor to the thenCrown Prince, now King Abdullah, had the
unenviable job of convincing Americans that their
best friends in the Middle East had not turned
against them. Almost overnight, he seemed to be
everywhere, being interviewed on television by
Charlie Rose and then Wolf Blitzer, among others,
and giving interviews to the leading print media.
After he’d finished his conversation with alJubeir, Charlie Rose asked his next guest, Charles
Krauthammer, for his reaction. Grinning, the
columnist said,“That was one of the best spin jobs
since the Clinton Administration.”
After both the interviews and the name-calling
had become less frequent, the man who spoke for
Saudi Arabia slipped back under the radar, getting
mentioned only for such things as dating CNN
correspondent Campbell Brown. Then, in late
2006, came a double thunderclap of news. The
first was that Prince Turki al-Faisal, who’d been
the Saudi ambassador for just 15 months, abruptly
resigned.The second was the announcement that
his replacement was not to be another member of
the royal family but the cool and competent 44year old al-Jubeir himself.
Since presenting his credentials to President
Bush in February 2007, the new envoy has probably
visited him more often than any other, according
to sources close to the embassy. Today, al-Jubeir is
seldom sighted, especially in comparison to five or
six years ago, when he was a regular at hotspots like
Georgetown’s Café Milano. He prefers to operate
behind the scenes, focusing on intime dinners for
small groups of major movers and shakers at his

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

Saudi Arabian Ambassador Adel al-Jubeir,
proved to be an effective spin master after
the 9/11 attacks. (Photos courtesy of the
Embassy of Saudi Arabia)

palatial residential compound overlooking the
Potomac in McLean. As for job performance, he
has been more than simply competent, as visits
to Saudi Arabia by top level officials in the Bush
administration are at an all-time high.
Vice President Dick Cheney, who made a
highly publicized visit to Saudi Arabia in 2006,
has returned to the oil rich desert kingdom twice
since then. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
made a visit in January, as did President George W.
Bush, who returned in mid-May. Other political
bold-faced visitors include Speaker of the House
Nancy Pelosi, Secretary of Energy Samuel Bodman
and Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff.
Exactly how much of the credit for the increase
in the very VIP treks to his homeland can be
attributed to al-Jubeir is unknown, but the names
and numbers speak volumes. On a different level,
since Adel al-Jubeir became ambassador, there’s
been a marked increase in the number of Saudi
students now studying in the U.S. – currently
some 20,000 according to embassy sources.
Former U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia
(2001-2003) Robert Jordan, today a law partner
at Baker & Botts in Dallas, has been an Adel alJubeir watcher since 2001. Jordan told Washington

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

Life, “He has a very well-developed background
for being an ambassador. His father was a diplomat,
he lived in Germany, and he has an advanced
degree from Georgetown. So he’s been oriented,
pretty much all his life, toward a diplomatic and
international relations career. He’s not a member
of the royal family, but he certainly has great access
to king Abdullah.”
Conceivably, he could even develop a Kissingertype role, and in some ways has done so already. He
is flying back to Riyadh regularly because the King
doesn’t like to use telephones or other means of
communication – he prefers face-to-face. He has
also participated from time to time on trips to other
countries as an envoy to lay the groundwork for
the king’s own diplomatic efforts and he frequently
serves as interpreter at these meetings.” (He is fluent
in Arabic, English, and German.).
Al-Jubeir is also serious about contemporary
history, but that is not to say he doesn’t know
how to relax and have a good time. As vigorous
an exercise buff, he plays squash and racquetball
and skis in both Aspen and the Swiss Alps. And,
like many a royal prince, he’s fond of horses –
but, his have two wheels instead four legs. His
favorite pastime is to join pals and drive through
Middleburgh into the hills of Virginia on one of
his several Harley-Davidsons.
Another subject Al-Jubeir has studied, is the
U.S.. He came here at 16 to attend the University of
North Texas, where he graduated summa cum laude
before pursuing an M.A. in International Relations
at Georgetown (where former Ambassador Prince
Bandar bin Sultan discovered and recruited him for
the Saudi foreign service).The results of that study
can be seen in his frequently-quoted statement
that,“Unless you understand the importance of the
local high school football team and the values of
a small town in America, you will not understand
this country.”
His swift rise has been described as “meteoric.”
Watching the rest of the trajectory should prove to
be equally eye catching, yet, not as flashy.

’s neither the chicest nor most buzzed about
Caribbean island destination; it’s not the most
expensive ... nor the cheapest either; it’s simply
Nevis – a sombrero-shaped single peak volcanic
isle near the top of the Lesser Antilles archipelago
whose charm creeps into your soul like the
rum in beachside restaurant Sunshine’s (www.
sunshinenevis.com) famous Killer Bee cocktails.
With its yellow, red and green reggae colors,
and relaxed open-air space, Sunshine’s is as
Caribbean cliché as it gets on here. It’s a local
favorite – the Wahoo fish filet is almost double

the size and half the price of the island’s more
posh eateries, notably those belonging to the
Four Seasons Resort Nevis (www.fourseasons.
com/nevis) located north on Pinney’s Beach
about 10-minutes away.
The Four Seasons is where you hang
your hat if you are looking for a complete
resort experience: spacious sea-view suites,
championship golf, a tranquil spa oasis, attentive
24/7 care, and the island’s best kids program.
Located on prime leeward beachside real
estate, the resort strikes a harmonious balance

between international quality amenities and
unassuming and relaxed West Indies charm.
Days on Nevis are as active, leisurely, luxe or
low maintenance as you wish. You won’t find
crowded all-inclusive resorts or towering cruise
ships unloading sun factor 80 plastered tourists
into downtown straw markets. At the Four
Seasons, you’ll split time with honeymooners
and the occasional corporate incentive group
while basking in the lap of serene resort living.
Christopher Columbus landed in Nevis in
1493, followed a century and a half later by the

BY M I C H A E L M C L E M E N T S
82

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

British and French, who established an agricultural
economy that does much to explain the island’s
characteristic plantation stylings. Today, these
centuries-old vestiges of Nevis’ agrarian past have,
with varying degrees of success, been converted
into charming upscale accommodations.The most
notable being The Hermitage, Nisbet Plantation
Beach Club, Montpelier Plantation Inn, Golden
Rock Plantation Inn, and the Old Manor Nevis.
The Hermitage (www.hermitagenevis.com),nestled
into the leeward hillside of Mount Nevis,is a quaint
and romantic boutique resort centered around a
charming 17th-century former plantation home.
The 15 individual cottage units are family-owned
and operated and attract a loyal following of return
visitors as well as celebrity clientele.
Hermitage owner Richard Lupinacci came
to St. Kitts in the ’70s as an employee of Bank
of America and never looked back. When a local
friend showed him the house, one of the oldest
wooden structures in the Caribbean, it had been
abandoned for generations and was in ruins: no
roof, no floor – just a frame. Richie Lupinacci,
Richard’s son who now manages the property,
explains, “My father wanted to knock it down
and start from scratch but the seller kept telling
him he couldn’t. My dad persisted. The man said
‘No, the frame is too strong, you literally can’t
knock it down.’ ”
Built by shipwrights, the 2,000-square foot
main house had been constructed using one of
the world’s most durable woods – the hardwood
Lignum Vitae. This fire and water-resistant and
self-lubricating wood is so strong it was used as
the shaft bearings on World War II submarines.
The trees are long gone but the structure of
The Hermitage’s main house remains intact.
Another U.S. transplant, Bob Bartolomei
manages The Botanical Garden of Nevis (www.
botanicalgardennevis.com). He traded NewYork City
financial jungles for lush tropical rainforests. His
Garden of Eden etched into the monkey-filled
hillsides overlooking the capital Charlestown is
a must for nature lovers. The seven-acre garden
features thousands of tropical plants and palms, a
Rainforest Conservatory, and beautiful Orchid
terraces. After your tour, grab lunch at the
property’s gourmet restaurant, 1787 Bistro. Its
breezy verandahs and sweeping sea vistas are ideal
for a lazy lunch or starry dinner.
1787 Bistro is named after the founding date

of nearby Montpelier Plantation Inn (www.
montpeliernevis.com). Like most colonial era
dwellings on Nevis, the bricks of this 18thcentury sugar plantation were hand-cut from
the island’s trademark ash-colored lava rock. The
volcano isn’t active anymore, like on neighboring
Montserrat, but from lava rock buildings to
geothermal springs, the island is heavily influenced
by its volcanic past.
The Carib people, who arrived on Nevis in
the 14th century, named the island “Oualie”
meaning “land of beautiful waters” after its
geothermal springs. Today, government offices
fill the former Bath Hotel, whihc was completed
in 1778 as the Caribbean’s first luxury hotel. It
catered to the rich and famous who came to soak
in the therapeutic springs.The same geothermal
activity holds new promise as an alternative

energy source for the island’s 11,000 inhabitants
– a governmental delegation recently visited
Iceland with the goal of duplicating that nation’s
geothermal energy independence by 2010.
The quaint and eclectic hillside Bananas Bistro
(+1-869-469-1891) is powered by creative
energy.The pink wooden dining spot opened in
2006 as the brainchild of English owner Gillian
Smith and has quickly become a trendy must
try. I loved the 1950’s leather ice skating boots
hung on the post of an antique wire-framed bed.
The food is just as artistic. The locally-sourced
vegetables came crisp and flavorful, the Mahimahi
had been selected that morning, and the Basmati
rice with asparagus and light Béarnaise sauce
were cooked to perfection.
The next morning, I found myself horseback
riding on trials near Bananas Bistro with The
Clockwise: The Four Seasons stunning spa oasis; Mango
restaurant with views of St. Kitts in the distance; Quaint
cottages at The Hermitage.

LIFESTYLES | CARIBBEANTRAVEL

Hermitage’s equestrian guide. Owners Richard
and Maureen Lupinacci are self-described “horse
people” and take pride in knowing that the
majority of their 19 horses were rescued from
racetracks in Puerto Rico.
The views of the windward coast are outstanding
and a light breeze is keeping the tropical sunshine
from becoming over-bearing – temperatures stay
between 75 and 85 degrees year round in the hills.
My horse, however, can’t stop eating mangos.The
sweet fruit is a national obsession here.There are,
depending on whom you speak to, anywhere
from 10 to 13 different varieties of it on the island.
The Julie was described by one local enthusiast as
“the Cadillac of mangos.”
Mango (869-469-1111), the aptly named Four
Seasons Resort restaurant, provides one of the
island’s best culinary treats. Located on Pinney’s
Beach a few minutes south of the resort, the
establishment is known for its West Indian cuisine
and cozy seaside charm. At night, stars and the
lights of sister island St. Kitts fill the void left by the
dark Caribbean sea while the rhythmic sounds
of waves mix with Bob Marley. If you can’t relax
here, you can’t relax anywhere. The congenial
wait staff recommends the freshly caught whole
red snapper. I’m feeling like spiny lobster tail. I
solve my dilemma by ordering the lobster tail
salad appetizer and whole red snapper main
course. Both are fresh and divine.
Another way to experience Nevian seafood
is via the Four Seasons Resort “Dive and Dine”
experience. Organized in cooperation with the
island’s top charter captain, Ellis Chaderton
from Scuba Safaris Ltd. (info@scubanevis.com)
and hosted by Four Seasons Executive Chef
Bruno Correa along with Sous Chef Denis
Bruemmel, the program lets guests dive and
capture their dinner.
“Seafood always tastes better when you know
you’ve caught it. Plus, the guests love walking
down the dock past the other guests with these
huge lobsters in hand,” says Bruemmel, a German
national, who was a catalyst for the experience.
The package includes breakfast, a dive orientation,
two tank dives, and a private beach dinner. It costs
US$1,950 for the first pair or couple and $500
for each addition person thereafter with a max of
six persons.
For other dives, ask Chaderton and the Scuba
Safaris team to take you to the island’s favorite

84

Sunset view from a Four Seasons Resort private beachside bungaloo.

“IF YOU CAN’T RELAX HERE,
you can’t relax anywhere.”
spots, including: Monkey Shoals, the eerie
“Christine” wreck, and Booby High Shoals.
Weather it’s diving with turtles or watching
their eggs hatch on Lover’s Beach, the island
has become a Mecca for turtle enthusiasts.
The Four Seasons has even created a Sea
Turtle Education Program for kids three to
nine. Developed in cooperation with the
Caribbean Conservation Corporation (CCC),
the program allows kids to adopt a satellite
transmitter-tagged sea turtle and follow its
movements online. It’s a positive example
of tourism supporting sustainable and ecofriendly activities.
With a law that states no building can be
taller than the island’s tallest palm tree, be assured
Nevis won’t be spoiled by sea-lined condo blight.
The island relies on tourist dollars, however, so
development is inevitable.So far the island has been
able to remain natural and safe while maintaining
its historic charm and consistently offering unique
high-end luxury experiences … just watch out
for those Killer Bee cocktails.

PGA GRAND SLAM OF GOLF WEEK
Enjoy the beautiful sights of Bermuda, brush
up on your golf swing, and catch some of the
world’s best golfers, include Padraig Harrington
and Trevor Immelman, as they compete
in this 36-hole annual tournament.
Beginning October 13, Mid Ocean
Club, Bermuda. Call 800-742-4638 for
tickets or visit www.pga.com.
For accommodations, visit
www.bermudatourism.com

CURAÇAO NOW!
Travelers looking for an affordable getaway
should take advantage of unprecedented deals
throughout the island, including $100 airfare to
Curaçao, free car rentals, and food and beverage
credit at participating hotels from now through
December 15 and May 1 to July 1. Start booking
now, because the deal ends November 15. Visit
www.curacao.com/now for reservations.

ST. REGIS RESORT, BAHIA BEACH
Construction started in June on what is sure to be one of the most luxurious resorts in Puerto
Rico, so start planning your trip now. Slated to open in 2010, the hotel features over 130 guest
units, a world-class spa and fitness center, several restaurants, and a grand ballroom, among other
amenities. St. Regis Resort, Bahia Beach, Puerto Rico, bahiabeachpuertorico.com
10TH ANNUAL TTSA
CARRIACOU SAILING SERIES
Head to Grenada for this highly anticipated
Trinidad and Tobago Sailing Association’s fourday event that mixes sailing and socializing.The
short courses allow the races to
end by mid-afternoon each day,
leaving plenty of time for postrace celebrations on the beach.
November 13-16; Tyrell
Bay Marina, Carriacou,
Grenada; 868-634-4519;
setsail@ttsailing.org

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

THE LANDINGS AT ST. LUCIA,
A ROCKRESORT
Heated plunge pools, suites with private outdoor
space, and a choice of European or Caribbean
décor add to the allure of the irresistible beach
and turquoise water at this brand new resort.
The Landings at St. Lucia; landingsstlucia.com
HORSEBACK RIDING IN ST. MAARTEN
From remote nature trails to scenic waterfalls,
equestrian tours offer a unique way to
experience St. Maarten. Lucky Stables offers
a number of packages that are perfect for a
romantic outing or family adventure. Lucky
Stables, +011-599-544-5255, luckystables.
shoreadventures.net

Hunt Country Couture
Although far from the city, Middleburg manages to make a fashionable name for itself
BY VICKY MOON

L

et’s face it: fashion in Middleburg is
not the same as fashion in the big
city. For many, the daily country
wardrobe consists of jeans, boots,
and an old sweater. However, given
the proper invitation, exciting event,
or elegant party, the ladies and
gentlemen of Middleburg are able to
make a head-turning transition. They
also have some very talented fashion
experts to guide them along the way.
“The dress here is traditional,” says
designer Karen Ewbank. “It’s classical
and British inspired,” she adds.
A native New Zealander, Ewbank
studied fashion design at Wellington Poly
Tech, worked as a theatrical costume
designer in Auckland, and went on to
model in Paris and Milan. “I learned a
lot about clothing,” she says.
Like most in Middleburg, she
was bitten by the horse bug, and
indulged that passion for 20 years
before returning – a mere six years
ago – to fashion. She now designs
day and evening wear for ladies and
gentlemen near her PIGEONHILL
FARM atelier in Berryville, less than
one hour from Washington.
Wendy Pepper , Middleburg’s
most known designer, gained national
attention three years ago during the
first season of Bravo cable channel’s
“Project Runway.” She recently
expanded her horizons with a ready-towear sportswear collection called PRETTY
WORLD (her initials, W. P., reversed). “I’m
using vibrant colors and punchy printed knits
for sporty separates which can be combined
to create individual looks or used to accent
the perfect pair of jeans or evening skirt you
already own,” she says.

She’s also making new pieces all the time
and can frequently be found at her sewing
machine at Mark Metzger’s HIGHCLIFFE
CLOTHIERS The haberdashery, which offers

Middleburg has a distinct style all its own, with serveral local
designers and fashionable boutiques.

custom designed suits and shirts for men, has
recently relocated from the city to South
Madison Street in Middleburg. And, as if all
this work was not enough, Pepper continues
her haute couture business from her studio in
the village, by appointment only.
Troye Plaski has opened her new shoe salon,

NOBELNIELSON, on the other side of South
Madison Street. After studying English Literature
and Theater at University ofVirginia and traveling
through Europe, she went off to work in New
York City’s fashion industry.
Plaskitt first worked with Calvin
Klein Classifications (later renamed
Calvin Klein Classics) and later at
Ralph Lauren Women’s Wear. However,
“the commute from Middleburg was
horrendous,” she says. She took a local
job restoring furniture and also worked
with Nancy Bedford and her Welsh
ponies (Middleburg women and their
horses are a constant). She worked in
several shops in the village and eventually
decided to start one of her own.
The lovely shoes Plaskitt carries
include the Italian-made Franchetti
Bond (sturdy, handsome flats with
accents of a snaffle bit, bamboo, or
tassel). These elegant yet simple suede
flats come in classic colors: cobalt blue,
black, emerald green, bright red, and
on and on. She discovered these shoes
while strolling through Burlington
Arcade in London and immediately
tracked them to the source. She also
tracked down Stephen Bonanno, the
original cobbler of those well-known
multi-colored Palm Beach sandals.
On a fashion spree in Middleburg,
one can track down all types of places
to indulge. Who knows, you might
even spot a famous fashion plate like
Luciana Pedraza, the stunning wife of actor
Robert Duvall. “Fashion in Middleburg is
timeless, it’s never too provocative,” Ewbank
concludes. “It always has taste. That’s very
important around here.”
Readers wishing to contact Vicky Moon can email:
columns@washingtonlife.com.

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

BREECHES: Georgina Bloomberg turned out for show
jumping at the WIHS.

FLASK: The ladies riding side saddle carry a ﬂask as part
of the proper aire.

TOP HAT: A competitor at the WIHS waits in the stable
area for her class. bcalled

SHOWTIME

VICKYMOONDETAILSELEGANTEQUINESTYLEINHERBOOKEQUESTRIANSTYLE

W

hen the 50th anniversary of the
WASHINGTON INTERNATIONAL
HORSE SHOW takes place at the Verizon
Center on October 21-26, spectators will see
elegant ladies clad in vintage side-saddle attire
walking along F Street preparing for this very
special event.
Through the years, many talented
equestriennes have ridden in this competition:
Rose Marie Bogley, Monica Greenberg, and
the late Eve Fout. Jeanne Blackwell of The
Plains,Va., was inspired to take up riding astride
years ago when the horse show took place at
the D.C. Armory.
Blackwell, who was a young girl at the time,
found herself mesmerized during a break in the
evening performance.While visiting the powder
room, she glimpsed a chic woman getting ready
for the Ladies’ Side-Saddle class and watched
her apply bright red lipstick and fold her hair
neatly under a hairnet. The woman had on
dark breeches and tall black boots and wrapped
a heavy black wool apron around her waist in
a complicated manner. She wore a yellow vest
and white stock tie with a black jacket, a silk

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

top hat, and a veil pulled down across her face.
Blackwell ran to the edge of the ring to
watch. “Right then and there, I knew I had to
learn how to ride,” she recalls 40 years later. She
pursued a career with horses and now owns
the 65-acre Madcap Farm in
The Plains,Va., where she gives
riding lessons and operates a
boarding and training facility
to support her horse habit.
In early 2004, Blackwell
began her quest to master the
intricacies of riding side-saddle.
She is entirely self-taught. “I
went and bought the stuff and
started doing it trial and error
and picked up pointers along
the way, ” she says.
The history of ladies riding
side-saddle goes back as far as the 9th century.
In certain social circles, particularly among the
gentry and aristocracy, it was once considered
in poor taste for a woman to ride astride with one leg on each side of a horse. One of
the first versions of the actual side-saddle was

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

a heavily padded object used in 1382 by Anne
of Bohemia, wife of England’s king, Richard
II. The saddle is oriented to the left side, going
back to the days when a woman sat sideways
in her long dress behind a man.
The ladies’ riding habit and
tack are known as appointments.
Traditions and horse show rules
dictate everything must be everso-proper: a pair of white string
gloves is placed under the girth
on the left side with just the tips
of the gloves showing. These
non-slippery gloves would
be used in place of the proper
brown leather gloves in case
of rain. Each lady has a brown
leather sandwich case, which
must contain a small simple
sandwich (butter only, hold the mayo) on crustless white bread. It must be wrapped in a cloth
handkerchief or wax paper. The judges at the
Washington International Horse Show will be
checking every detail. Perhaps another horse-crazy
little girl will be watching very closely.

PRADA Navy Guipre lace dress
($3,040); Carol Mitchell, now located
on the first floor at Tysons Galleria,
2001 International Drive, McLean,Va.,
703-506-8963.

LEATHER
and lace
S

ugar and spice isn’t so nice anymore – especially when
they’re together. Take a cue from Jay Godfrey,Temperley,
and Erdem and mix it up. Mix your grandmother’s lace
and some leather boots for a bit of edge. ~ Carly McCormick

EXPLORE, EXPERIENCE, DISCOVER
Join Baron Baptiste November 22ND from 9am to 5pm at George Washington
University’s Marvin Center for a Personal Revolution All-Day Immersion.
Down Dog Yoga and Washington Life
Magazine are thrilled to welcome our
dear friend, renowned Yoga Master
Baron Baptist back to D.C. (Nov. 22ND)
for a rare one-day Personal Revolution
All-Day Immersion.
If you are ready to unlock your body’s
limitless potential, reach new heights of
physical and spiritual strength and ﬁnd
emotional balance, come join Baptiste
as he shares an ancient practice and
puts it into a format that everyone
can understand.

To sign up, go to www.downdogyoga.
com click on “REGISTER NOW!” on the
lower left corner of the homepage
or call, 202-965-9642 or 301-654-9644.
The cost of this workshop is $225.
And if you want to try a Personal
Revolution Bootcamp that will transform
your life forever the Baptiste Bootcamp
is a moment-by-moment approach to
decompress from your life and discover
transformation as a way of living.

The program is designed for all walks of
life, ages, and ﬁtness levels.
For more info about an upcoming
Baptiste Bootcamp visit www.
baronbaptiste.com or call 1-800-9369642. The breakthroughs and insights
you gain here will never leave you.

A Personal Revolution All-Day Immersion
is the perfect way to move toward
greater strength and vitality, renew
your mental edge and embrace a
deeper sense of spirituality. Beginners
are welcome. But space is limited.

To sign up, go to...
www.downdogyoga.com
or www.baronbaptiste.com

LIFE REVOLUTION, BODY TRANSFORMATION, TOTAL HEALTH
44

BAPTISTE IN CROW POSE

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| SEPTEMBER

| washingtonlife.com

WASHINGTON
S O C I A L D I A R Y
TheYoung&TheGuestList﹐WLInsider﹐AroundTown﹐andExclusiveParties﹐Parties﹐Parties!

Allison Rishty and Helen Salom are all smiles at the launch
of Buy Your Friend a Drink at WL’s fave Shaw District
lounge, The Space. (Photo by Tony Powell)

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

101

WASHINGTON
S O C I A L D I A R Y

WLINSIDER

A Prat Fall
Signature’s ACE in the Hole, Jerry Springer does Opera but it’s no La Traviata,
Carrie Fisher chain smokes, and is Mike Huckabee really that funny?
BY MICHAEL M. CLEMENTS

I

felt the summer of ’08 melt away along
with the spirit of the ’60s as I stood in the
crowd at the VIRGINMOBILEFESTIVAL.
Watching a surprisingly coherent Bob Dylan,
I felt privileged to see the aging Tambourine man,
but conflicted knowing his anti-establishment
edge had been replaced by corporate branding
and kids who scream “we want Kayne!” The
times have a-changed. Still, the line-up
of Jack Johnson, Moby, Foo Fighters,
and Wilco proved there is still some
summer love to go round.
There was love, and tears, during
SIGNATURETHEATER’s East Coast
premiere of ACE.The musical follows
the transformation of a troubled young
boy (Dalton Harrod) as he discovers
the heroic history of the father he
never knew. Harrod is commendable
but Jill Paice, who played his mother,
was outstanding. Artistic director
Eric Schaeﬀer deserves major accolades for his
ability to bring to life writer Richard Oberacker’s
complex characters. Watch out for child actor
Angelina Kelly, a beacon of light, who deserves a
Helen Hayes Award nod for her turn as Emily.
I sat next to Helen Hayes Awards president and
CEO Linda Levy Grossman at a private dinner
hosted by theatrical bon vivant Victor Shargai in
honor of Richard Thomas, the brain behind Jerry
Springer: The Opera. The quick-witted Brit came
to Washington to see the STUDIO THEATRE
SECOND STAGE production of his London
National Theatre hit.Thomas had high marks for
the show, commenting it was one of the best he
had seen. The musical – literally a Jerry Springer
episode from hell – was an audacious and fun
ride though the id, ego, heaven and Hades. Studio
Theatre continues to take the risks that put our
regional theater on the map. Unfortunately, my
date hasn’t returned my calls since.

102

Estranged redneck lovers, transvestites, and
cheeky morality duels between Jesus and Satan
aside, there are no substitutes for the classics such
as the WASHINGTON NATIONAL OPERA’s
opening night ofVerdi’s La Traviata at the Kennedy
Center. Director Marta Domingo delivered
Elizabeth Futral at her finest. The American
soprano’s masterful command of her craft
Left: ACE’s Jill Paice and Robert
Taylor. Below: Washington’s Funniest
Celebrity Gov. Mike Huckabee with
VSA president Soula Antoniou.

showcased Parisian courtesan Violetta’s full range
of unyielding romance and tragic nobility. I sat
next to German conductor Dan Einger at the
post performance dinner at the Italian Embassy.
The thirty-something prodigy with stylish
blonde hair conducts strictly from memory.
Equally brilliant was the WNO’s decision to
simulcast the performance to 15,000 fans at
Nationals Park. Hot dogs, light beer and Verdi
– that might have been a better date idea.
WOLF TRAP brought another classic to
the area: Les Misérables. Between this and Cold
Play’s Vive la Vida concert at the Verizon center,
I had my fill of rebellious 19th-century French
style this summer. The show, at the stunning
outdoor Filene Center (is this the best place to

see a show in the Mid-Atlantic region?) didn’t
include the Broadway darling’s revolving set,
but its epic quality, thundering score, and finelytuned ensemble made up for it. The lifelong
duel between Robert Evan (Valjean) and Robert
Hunt (Javert) carried the performance with a
powerful combination of mutual distain, bravado
and pride. It will be a hard act to follow when
Signature Theatre stages Les Mis in December.
Vive La Différence!
Hollywood love child, Stars Wars icon, Paul
Simon muse, bi-polar warrior, and chain smoking
self-deprecator Carrie Fisher brought her one
woman self-therapy session Wishful Drinking to
the Lincoln Theater as part of ARENASTAGE’s
“Arena Restaged” series – a two-year multivenue festival featuring American theatrical
giants, voices, and musicals.The campy daughter
of Debbie Reynolds and Eddie Fishers’ brand
of biting humor and self-flagellation touched on
Hollywood inbreeding, George Lucas’ lack of
personality, Princess Leila sex dolls, and struggles
with addiction and depression. Fisher uses the
force with strength and vulnerability to create a
hilarious one-woman show.
My performance-packed September finished
in the capacity of “celebrity judge” at the 15th
annual Funniest Celebrity in Washington Contest
hosted by VERYSPECIALARTS﹙VSA﹚. Mike
Huckabee took home the crown with zingers
such as “Mitt Romney changed positions more
than an under aged Chinese gymnasts,” along
with a few well-timed jabs at his campaign’s lack
of funds and its Chuck Norris endorsement.
My vote went to Politico’s James Kotecki whose
Eminem-styled rap dropped more poli-disses
than the Obama and McCain muckraking
campaigns. Way to keep it real James – word to
your laptop.
Readers wishing to get in touch with Michael can
email: columns@washingtonlife.com.

BITTERSWEET That was the feeling aer the screening of
the nationally-released ﬁlm Red, produced by local movie-man
Norman Dreyfuss. Bier because the ﬁlm is a meditative and
character-driven revenge ﬁlm about a man (Brian Cox) whose
beloved dog, Red, is shot and killed by troubled teens. Sweet
thanks to the plush décor and chocolate-covered catering
of Penn Quarter hotspot, the chocolate lounge Co Co.
Sala. THEGUESTS Dreyfuss’ friends and family members
– including son Brian, who brought the script to his aention
– mingled with Red author Jack Ketchum, co-producer John
Cecchi, Miss DC 2008 Kate Marie Grinold, and Co Co. Sala
owners Bharet Malhotra and Nisha Sidhu.

Joe Warren and Cameron Abrahams

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

Miss DC 2008 Kate Marie
Grinold and John Cecchi

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

Cindy McLaughlin,
Charlie Mayer, and
Kris Warner

Bharet Malhotra and Nisha Sidhu

Doug Dixon and Cheryl Nicholson

103

WASHINGTON
S O C I A L D I A R Y

THEYOUNG&THEGUESTLIST

Talking ’bout a Resolution
Set personal goals to launch your social season
BY ED I E VAN H O R N

T

L2 based on the bottom-half of his hipster
suit, I immediately thought: But, what would
Pepper do? Answer? Dr. Watkins would dash
home without a word of protest, prompting
his betrothed to muse, “Oh brother. I’ll bet
he shows back up in his revenge tuxedo.”
Like superman in the phone booth, Pepper
returned 20 minutes later in an impeccable
dinner jacket, and got waived through
without a hitch. His example is my NSSR
#3: In an increasingly list-obsessed town,
I resolve to gracefully play by the rules at
the door, no matter how arbitrary, pointless,
inconvenient, or unevenly applied they are.

he 2008-2009 social season began
last month with a private soirée
at the home of Calvin and Jane
Cafritz and will end after the
Opera Ball in June. With so many parties and
personalities to consider, it’s the perfect time
to make a New Social Season Resolution
(NSSR), or two, for the coming months.
There is always room for improvement, and
last month provided some perfect examples of
how to be better butterflies.

Madison turns five!
The “pre-resolutions” Edie Van Horn might
have written something like, “There were
lollipops and ferris wheel rides for lucky little
girls at L2 the other night. The party celebrated
the fifth birthday of the Madison, and was jointly
sponsored by MENSA and NuvaRing.” Wait.
Stop! How could I be so catty, shallow,
and downright ghasp boring? Ergo, my
NSSR #1 is to think of something
more interesting to say about
the Madison’s attractive, successful,
philanthropic young ladies. I resolve to forego
the easy lay-up, and instead say, when prompted,
“Actually, I met the ever so charming Sarah
Servesherself last week. Did you know that she’s
the chief of staff to Senator Reelectme?”
Fizzy Water
Guess what? Put lipstick on the Grog and
Tankard, and it turns into the Gin and Tonic!
The newly-christened G&T celebrated a
soft-opening this month with a packed-house
dance party presided over by co-owner Fritz
Brogan of Gryphon Room fame. Word to the
wise: if they look too young to be you, they
probably are – but that doesn’t mean their
party isn’t the best fun to be had all week. The
Y&GL isn’t getting any Y-er, and I, for one, am
guilty of having occasionally turned my back

on a great party because it felt too pre-school,
too packed, or too plebian.Which brings us to
my NSSR #2: Starting now, this junior cougar
resolves to retract her claws and welcome the
younger set. Cheers to Fritz for ushering in
a great crowd and some new faces. I look
forward to flirting with many of them.

Serving up good examples at L2
It’s easy to get ticked off when bouncers
won’t let you into a club because of a dress
code violation, and, faced with this situation,
the lesser among us might be tempted
to make a snide comment about who’s
judging whom. So, when I heard recently
that Pepper Watkins, the charming, dapper
fiancé of Becca Glover, was refused entry to

Adieu to the Embassy
This being the Diplomatic Issue, I would
be remiss if I didn’t report on the end of an era
at a certain house on Q Street in Georgetown,
which, for the past decade, has been occupied
by a steady stream of charming young men,
among them: Mat Lapinski, Jeff Grappone,
Harlow Voorhees, Matt Marchant, Graham
O’Donohue, and Bryce Worth. Affectionately
known as The Embassy to their mostly Y&GL
guests, this house has, over time, acquired a
well-deserved reputation for parties in the
classic style – generous cocktails, furniture
pushed out of the way, and civilized hours. And
so, when I learned that the last four remaining
residents recently moved out, my NSSR #4
became clear: to pick up where The Embassy
left off, and host at least one low-key cocktail
party at my house this season. I hope you’ll do
the same. Thanks for ten great years, boys.
In closing, there are no hard and fast rules
of behavior in society; one learns by watching
others, and sooner or later we all set an
example for someone else, whether we know
it or not. Happy season, my dears.
Readers wishing to get in touch with Edie Van Horn
can email: columns@washingtonlife.com.

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

NIGHTLIFE
Katelyn Calonkey, Katheryne Downes,
and Connie Kemper

Hunt Anderson and Grant Allen

Bailey Rockwell and Hollis Pica

Nicole Backus, Di Davis, and Kim Becker
WL SPONSORED

BYFAD.COM LAUNCH
The Space
PHOTOSBYTONYPOWELL

DRINKS ON ME Partygoers packed the rooop deck at
Shaw District htospot The Space for the Washington launch of
BuyYourFriendADrink.com, where buying beverages is a virtual
experience. BYFAD founder and CEO Steven Cohn made sure
guests were enjoying the drinks, while energetic Red Bull models
danced through the night. DOINGTHEROUNDS Winston Bao
Lord, Anna Kimsey, Greer Kimsey, Fritz Brogan, and Leslie Green.

CHAPTERJess McCann’s You Lost Him at Hello is a rollicking ride through
relationships, so not surprisingly, the talk of the party among the summer stylist
thirty-something crowd was love lost and won. McCann’s book treats love like a
sales plan, from promoting the product to closing the deal. For her part, the 31
year-old author is still single, but she has an impressive list of former boyfriends
– athletes and millionaires included. Perhaps she’s been too busy closing a book
deal than ﬁnding a new beau. PAGETURNERS: Michael Saylor, Winston Bao
Lord, Tricia Favro, Kim Becker, Gina Gun, and Tim and Kathleen English.

BEAR-ING UP WELL
Lynda Webster and her long-time fishing
buddy, retired Justice Sandra Day O’Connor,
were startled at a placid trout stream this
summer when a bear burst out of the woods
and headed right for them. “After the first
shock, we realized he wasn’t after us,” Lynda
said. “He was after the trout on her line.” After
a tense moment, the pair headed him off, and
kept both their fish and their cool.
Lynda kicked off the fall season once again
with her morning get-together at the Chevy
Chase Club. Spotted: Alma Powell, Barbie
Allbrion, Esther Coopersmith,
ever-soignée Alexine Jackson (who
had just celebrated her 50th wedding
anniversary, and found that hard to
believe. So do we.) Others included
Kathy Bushkin, the UN Foundation’s
Right: Barbara McDuffie shows off
one of the era-perfect poodle skirts
seen in the audience at the Lombardi
Cancer Center’s Doo Wop Concert at
the Warner Theatre. Below: Bonnie
Roberts and her husband Stafford
Markham check out the lapel flower of
Paul Schweitzer, a co-chairman of the
Lombardi Doo Wop concert.

DANCIN’ IN THE AISLES
Georgetown University Hospital’s Vincent
Lombardi Cancer Center
skipped its gala this year
because of scheduling
problems.Instead,
supporters packed the
Warner Theater for the
Lombardi Doo Wop
Concert for Cancer,
occasionally jumping up
to dance to the golden
oldies. Each of the ten
musical acts were from
the period 1954-1975
and included some of the
original singers, and each
seemed to be members of
the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame, or have a star on Hollywood
Boulevard. They were proud to tell it,
like Terry Johnson of the Flamingos:
“Doo Wop in 1959 was the year that
changed my life, thanks to I Only
Have Eyes for You. It got me out of my
beat-up Chevy, and into a mile-long
Cadillac Eldorado, out of a crummy
apartment, and into a Fifth Avenue
penthouse, sold over 4 million records,
and got me some fi-ine women.”

NBC News4 sportscaster and multiple
Emmy-winner George Michael was on hand, as
was Dr. Louis Wiener, the new director of the
Cancer Center, whose pancreatic and prostate
cancer programs will benefit from the evening.
Presented by sponsor Marvin McIntyre and
his family, the evening was dedicated to the
memory of philanthropist Eddie Geisinger, an
enthusiastic Doo Wop fan, as were the guests,
many still humming familiar melodies at the
after-party next door in the Atrium.

KALEIDSCOPE
In the huge Russian Embassy ballroom, a
tea dance organized by Selene Obolensky
drew 150 who whirled to balalaikas of Old
Russia as well as today’s Angel and Aces group.
World politics forgotten for charity, the event
benefited the special needs children of Berezichi,
the school on the Russian estate once owned
by the family of Selene’s late husband, Prince
Alexis Obolensky. (Alexis descended from the
Rurik dynasty who ruled centuries before, in
his words,“those upstart Romanovs.”) … Thirty
happy guests convened at Ishin and George
Ludlow’s home, entranced by their beautifullydesigned pool, and Ishin’s equally beautiful
food … Whoops, this columnist dropped
a line or two in the last issue and telescoped
Susan and Steve Porter’s summer doings with
JoAnn and John Mason’s. Steve, not John, was
appointed to the National Endowment for the
Arts board … Lots of young executives and
Antinori wines at Teatro Goldoni, when owner
Michael Kosmides hosted a wine dinner. Seen:
Bob Kyle, CEO of Voyage Yacht Shares; Jeﬀrey
Ferguson of The Carlyle Group; and from
Hollywood, Michael’s actress sister Joanna and
her fiancé, Brock Edwards.
Readers wishing to get in touch with Donna can
email: columns@washingtonlife.com.

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

WASHINGTON
S O C I A L D I A R Y

AROUNDTOWN

Parties, Parties, Parties!
Writer and photographer milestones and an all-male production of Romeo and Juliet

HALLOWED GROUND
BOOK PARTY
CATEMAGENNISWYATT and GILBERT
GROSVENOR celebrated publication of
Journey Through Hallowed Ground: Birthplace
of the American Ideal at the National
Geographic Society / National Endowment
for the Humanities Chairman BRUCECOLE,
Grosvenor, and author ANDREWCOCKBURN
(Photos by Ed Lehmann)

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

107

WASHINGTON
S O C I A L D I A R Y

AROUNDTOWN

TRANSFORMER
GALLERY’S SHOW
IZETTEFOLGER with actor
JAVIERRODRIGUEZ, one of

12 Mexican artists whose work
appeared in the Transformer
Gallery’s show at the Mexican
Cultural Institute. / JAMES
ALEFANTIS, who helped
produce the show, with ADAM
HASLERand TORYCHOATE
(Photos by Kyle Samperton)

WARREN
CAPITAL GOLF
TOURNAMENT
GEOFFWASHBURNTHOMAS
TATEHARRYKANTARIAN
and JOHNMILLER raised funds
for Children’s National Medical
Center at the Members Club At
Four Streams in Beallsville, Md. /
JOSEPHWARREN smiles aer
his hole-in-one.
(Photos by Jessica Berrineau )

Blair House
A Witness to History
By Ambassador Nancy Brinker
Chief of Protocol of the United States

Photography by Carol M. Highsmith

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

111

HOME LIFE | BLAIRHOUSE

Blair House, on Jackson Square N.W. across from the Old Executive Oﬃce Building, now comprises four interconnected dwellings with a total of 119 rooms on ﬁve levels.

lair House endures as a warm and
welcoming “home away from home”
for visiting heads of state and other
dignitaries. Its elegant rooms are settings
for important social and ceremonial aspects of
American diplomacy, and it continues the legacy
of hospitality and service to the nation left by
one of our most influential founding families.
While serving as chief of protocol, I have
had the opportunity to work with those who
care deeply about the preservation our official
presidential guest residence. Undersecretary Pat
Kennedy has seen to it that Blair House remains
a high priority at the Department of State. Selwa
“Lucky” Roosevelt has led a 25-year effort to
make it an inviting and comfortable home, and
Lloyd Hand’s success in establishing and funding
a permanent endowment to ensure it remains an
American showplace has been unprecedented.
Harry Mahar at the Department of State works
to maintain the infrastructure and mechanical
systems, and director Randy Bumgardner and
his heroic team provide unparalleled hospitality
and care to all those who stay here.

HISTORICALOVERVIEW
The Federal style townhouse was built
in 1824 for Joseph Lovell, the first surgeon
general of the United States, and acquired in
1837 by Francis Preston Blair, who came to
Washington to transform the Globe newspaper

112

into a pro-Andrew Jackson publication. (Blair
was part of Jackson’s circle of close friends and
informal advisors known in the rival press as
the “Kitchen Cabinet.”) It would remain in
the Blair family’s hands for more than 100
years. In 1859, Blair built a house next door
for his daughter, Elizabeth Blair Lee, and her
husband, Capt. Samuel P. Lee, a grandson of
Revolutionary War patriot Richard Henry Lee
and third cousin of Gen. Robert E. Lee. After
the two dwellings were combined, the complex
was occasionally called the Blair-Lee House,
although Blair House is its official name today.
Blair House was declared a national historic
landmark in 1939, three years before it was
purchased by the Federal Government as an
official guest house for monarchs, presidents and
prime ministers while they are in Washington.
Harry S. Truman and his family occupied Blair
House from 1948 to 1952 when the White
House underwent major renovations. On Nov.
1, 1950, two Puerto Rican nationalists attempted
to assassinate President Truman there. The plot
failed although a White House policeman, Leslie
Coffelt, died in the attack.
In 1985, Congress appropriated $8.6 million
for much needed structural repairs but stipulated
no government funds be used for redecoration.
The Blair House Restoration Fund was then
formed to solicit support from the private sector
for refurbishing and long-term conservation.

Under the dedicated leadership of former
Reagan administration Chief of Protocol Selwa
“Lucky” Roosevelt, and the generosity of its
many supporters, the fund continues its unique
public/private partnership with the Department
of State that ensures Blair House’s ongoing
preservation for future generations.
Blair House is now a compound of four
connected dwellings, including tow conjoined
and renovated row houses at 700 and 704 Jackson
Place N.W., which were purchased in 19691970, and the adjacent Trowbridge House on
Lafayette Park, which is being converted to serve
as an official residence for former U.S. presidents
visiting the capital.Today the complex totals 119
rooms on five levels covering 70,000+ square
feet, which is about 5,000 square feet larger than
the White House.

LINCOLNROOMPREVIOUSPAGE

Anyone of political and social consequence during
the Jackson and Van Buren administrations likely
visited Francis Preston Blair. Family lore describes
him talking with Abraham Lincoln, comfortably
seated before the ﬁreplace, late into the evenings.
On April 18, 1861, three days aer the aack on
Fort Sumter and at Lincoln’s request, Blair oﬀered
the Union Army command to Col. Robert E. Lee
in this room. Aer thoughtful consideration Lee
respectfully declined by saying, “… How can I draw
my sword upon Virginia, my native state?” Today this
room serves as a waiting room for U.S. government
oﬃcials calling on visiting foreign leaders.

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

É LIBRARY

Blair House’s handsome library features American
history, literature and general reference books. Also
included are volumes on a variety of international
topics, oen inscribed by their distinguished donors,
and a collection of autobiographies signed by
presidents and ﬁrst ladies.

Ç TRUMANSTUDYBELOWLEFT
This quiet, contemplative siing room was much
favored by President Truman, who appreciated its
lovely view and warm southern exposure. He used
it as his private “Oval Oﬃce” for most of his second
term. Former First Lady Nancy Reagan received
visitors here during her family’s stay for the state
funeral of President Ronald Reagan in July 2004.
Ç BLAIRREARDRAWINGROOM

When Blair House ceased to be a private residence
in 1942, its ﬁrst oﬃcial guests saw it much as the
Blairs had done: ﬁlled with 18th- and 19th-century
furniture, coromandel screens, and Chinese export
porcelain. The formal reception rooms were reserved
for entertaining and ceremonial occasions, and they
serve the same functions today. Guests mingle amid
the atmosphere of an elegant, private home. Former
Presidents Truman and Eisenhower are thought to
have reconciled their diﬀerences here aer their
return together from John F. Kennedy’s funeral on
Nov. 25, 1963.

HOME LIFE | BLAIRHOUSE
É LEEDININGROOM

During his time at Blair House, President Truman held weekly
luncheon meetings with his Cabinet in the tranquil dining room.
Discussions formulating legislation that ultimately became the
Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan were conducted around
the dining table. It was here that Truman was persuaded to send
American troops into Korea and where he made the diﬃcult
decision to relieve General Douglas MacArthur of command
of American troops in the Paciﬁc. It was also the scene of Tricia
Nixon’s wedding rehearsal dinner. During visits today, this room
is reserved exclusively for important private meetings and meals
presided over by Blair House’s highest-ranking oﬃcial guests, oen
with the vice president and members of the Cabinet aending.

Ç JACKSONPLACEDININGROOM

Mark Hampton’s design blends the French Empire style and its
English and American interpretations, popular 1820-1850, with
earlier Federal and mid-Victorian touches in keeping with the
row houses’ c. 1860 origins. The so, cool palee of blues and
whites with gilt accents recalls the White House Blue Room
and forms a subtle background for the dramatic mahogany and
ebonized furnishings.

s the fall auction season gets
underway, fashionistas have set their
sights on sales of costume jewelry,
a specialized category that has
become one of the “hot” new collecting fields
for women of all ages. On October 2 at DOYLE
NEWYORK’s auction galleries, the excitement
will kick off with a party co-hosted by Doyle
and Interview magazine to celebrate and preview
the October 7 auction of two eclectic collections
belonging to two iconic women: the famous
society and Andy Warhol Factory girl Brigid
Berlin, and San Francisco philanthropist, art
collector, and style icon Ann Gey.
Berlin, who is best known for her close
association with Warhol from the mid-’60s
through the mid-’80s and who appeared in many
of his cult films of that period, was born into a
world of privilege as the daughter of Richard

COOLREPOSE
Collectors of contemporary design pieces
flocked to Rockefeller Plaza to attend
Christie’s NewYork Contemporary Design
sale on September 8 where the top lot
was a sleek mirror-polished stainless steel
sofa designed in 1995 by Ron Arad that
realized $206,500.

This stainless steel sofa
by Ron Arad recently
sold for $206,500 at
Christies’s.

116

Berlin, who ran the Hearst media empire for 52
years. As a young girl she would accompany her
socialite mother, “Honey” Berlin, to the House
of Gripoix, the most legendary costume jewelry
designer of the day. A master of
the technique of glass enameling,
the firm, founded in 1890, is also
credited with developing a sheen
that perfectly imitates cultured
pearls. Coco Chanel, who
was known for her exacting
standards, trusted Gripoix to
produce pieces for her collections.
Berlin’s sophisticated childhood
combined with her flamboyant
personality and taste for the avant-garde
acquired during her years as a Warhol
confidante, is reflected in the 200 pieces that
comprise her costume jewelry collection.
Signed couture pieces by her friends Iradj Moini
and Kenneth Jay Lane are included alongside
vintage examples by Gripoix and other
notable designers. Collectors will find figural
pieces depicting snakes, lizards, and seahorses
as well as more understated neoclassical pieces
that have a more geometrical design. Like
Chanel, Berlin insisted on the highest level of
craftsmanship and design and her collection,
above all else, reflects this.
Ann Getty is also known for her impeccable
taste as an interior designer. Throughout
her successful career she has worked with
clients around the globe. Her international
connections with craftsmen and artisans reflects
her keen eye and interest in exotic design. Her
costume jewelry collection, 60 lots acquired
from the 1950 through the 1990s, demonstrates
her enthusiasm for unique pieces especially
noteworthy for their painterly assembly of
colored stones. Outstanding examples by Moini,
Lane, Karl Lagerfeld, Miriam Haskell, Stanley

Left: Karl Lagerfeld for Chanel Flower Pin, France,
1990s, purple and yellow pate de verre set in gilt-metal
wire, from the Collection of Ann Getty. Estimate $7501,000. Right: Gripoix Parure, France, 1960s, comprising
choker, large and small scatter pin, and pair of pendant
earrings, all featuring a domed oval in silvertone
metal with rose cabochon surrounded by rhinestones
in a frame of green pate de verre with clear baguette
rhinestones. Estimate $1,000-$1,500.

Hagler, William de Lillo, Trafari, Isabel Canovas,
Hobe, and Dominique Aurientis, among others,

are sure to incite vigorous bidding from costume
jewelry collectors.
One of the best things about costume jewelry
is its affordability.Most lots in the October 7 sale list
estimates well below $1,000. For Washingtonians
looking to dazzle – without the expensive price
tag – at the next Opera Ball or Kennedy Center
Honors Gala, this sale fits the bill.
As Coco Chanel once observed,“Nothing
looks more like a fake jewel than a beautiful
jewel. Why get mesmerized by a beautiful
stone? One might as well wear a check
around one’s neck.”
Readers wishing to get in touch with Renée Drake
can email: columns@washingtonlife.com.

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

HOME LIFE | ART&AUCTION

world-class

TREASURE TROVE
A few of the stunning, one-of-a-kind items at the
Baltimore Summer Antiques Show

A

TIFFANY MASTERWORK
“Pond lily”-style lamp from
the master craftsman of
glass with three settings and
a gilded base, circa 1920
($55,000). Lillian Nassau
LLC, New York City

record 550 exhibitors and 30,000 visitors ensured that the 28th annual
Baltimore Summer Antiques Show was bigger and better than ever this
year. At least one dealer reported sales in the seven figures, with many others
reporting heavy sales throughout Labor Day weekend.The Palm Beach Show
Group, the event’s owners and operators, plan to debut a four-day D.C. Spring
Antiques Show on March 6 at the Walter E.Washington Convention Center,
where more than 300 international exhibitors will showcase an extensive
selection of fine art, antiques and jewelry.
DAZZLING DIAMONDS
Art Deco bracelet by Cartier,
225 diamonds with total
weight of 55 carats, circa 1920
($525,000). Camille Dietz
Bergeron, New York City

Located in quiet, prestigious Kalorama, this is one of
Washington, D.C.’s great homes. Having undergone a
complete restoration, this grand, yet warm and welcoming
home offers a private, gated patio, a roof terrace, a wine
cellar, and parking for 5 cars.
Jay Dahill 301.646.5816/ 202.364.5200 (O).

Boasting unparalleled living, this AIA award-wining
contemporary home is just 3 blocks from Washington, D.C.
Sited on a private, 11,200-square-foot lot, this updated
4-bedroom, 4-bath home is great for indoor and outdoor
living and entertaining.
Eleanor Balaban 301.229.7990/ 301.907.7600 (O).

This elegant, urban residence enjoys the white glove
amenities for which the Ritz-Carlton is renowned. Stateof-the-art technology and sophisticated decorative
touches complement the 2 master suites, the den, the
chef’s kitchen, and the spa baths.
Tony Hain 202.415.8669/ 202.483.6300 (O).

Arlington, Virginia

Arlington, Virginia

Potomac, Maryland

Potomac, Maryland

$2,400,000

$1,400,000

$3,250,000

$1,850,000

This true masterpiece of design offers 4 bedrooms, 4 baths,
a gourmet kitchen, a luxurious master suite with 3 closets,
and top-of-the-line ﬁnishes. Perfect for entertaining, this
one-of-a-kind home is not duplicated in the Washington,
D.C. area, and is close to many amenities.
John Eric 703.798.0097/ 703.522.0500 (O).

With its mid-century American design and soothing Asian
aesthetics, this thoroughly modern, 3,600-square-foot
residence with 5 bedrooms and 3.5 baths is located in the
highly sought-after area of north Arlington.
John Mentis 202.549.0081/ 703.522.0500 (O).
john.mentis@longandfoster.com

Sited on nearly one acre, this Arts & Crafts-style
masterpiece is one-year-old and is located one block from
Potomac Village. Encompassing almost 12,000 square feet
of luxurious living space, the home includes 8 bedrooms,
7 full baths, and 2 half baths. Pam Weiss or Kathy Lorenz
240.498.6644/ 301.983.0060 (O).

This stunning Rosemark colonial boasts the ﬁnest
materials and ﬁnishes. Sited on a private, one-acre lot,
the home includes a 2-story foyer, vaulted ceilings in
the family room and sunroom, and a home theater. Kathy
Lorenz or Pam Weiss 240.350.7355/ 301.983.0060 (O).
kathylorenz@comcast.net

McLean, Virginia

Washington, D.C.

Bethesda, Maryland

Washington, D.C.

From $1,899,000

Chalice Crest, a private enclave of 13 custom homes built
by Sekas Homes, LTD, complete this distinguished and
private cul-de-sac. With only 2 lights to Washington, D.C.,
the 7 available lots are ideal for commuters. The model
home featured is open 12-4:00 p.m. on Sundays.
Lilian Jorgenson 703.407.0766/ 703.790.1990 (O).

$5,999,000

Perfectly sited on 1.5 acres of exquisite grounds, this home
is very private yet is close to Georgetown. The light-ﬁlled
rooms can accommodate large-scale entertaining, while
the private rooms include a master suite and 6 additional
bedrooms. Sarah Howard 202.965.7774 or Susie Maguire
202.841.2006/ 202.944.8400 (O).

$2,185,000

Potomac River Design Build/Studio Z have built this oneof-a-kind, new Arts & Crafts-style home for elegant ecoliving. Using best building practices for energy and health,
this 6-bedroom, 5.5-bath home features a custom kitchen,
a butler’s pantry, and private alfresco living. Ilissa Flamm
301.455.6522/ 301.229.4000 (O). ilissa@lnf.com

$1,129,000

Location rules supreme on this quiet, tree-lined street.
Sited only blocks to Metro, this stately center-hall colonial
has 5 bedrooms and 3.5 baths on 4 ﬁnished levels. The mainlevel family room leads to a private, fenced yard with a
deck and a 2-car garage. Kimberly Cestari 202.253.8757/
202.966.1400 (O). kimberly.cestari@lnf.com

Washington, D.C.
$1,495,000

Washington, D.C.

$1,445,000

This towering Cleveland Park colonial is just 2 blocks
from Metro and shops. Located across the street from a
park, the 5-bedroom, 3.5-bath home includes 2 ﬁreplaces,
a table-space kitchen, an elevator, and a garage. Jamie
Coley and Leigh Reed 888-907-6643/ 240.497.1700 (O).
coleyreedhomes@aol.com

Bethesda, Maryland

$1,350,000

This elegant home offers more then the typical traditional
colonial. With whimsically modern appeal, the open ﬂoor
plan features dramatic views of the 50-foot-by-18-foot
pool and gardens. This private oasis is truly captivating.
Rorrie Egan 301.758.0337/ 301.229.4000 (O).
rorrie@longandfoster.com

In Select Areas

Potomac, Maryland

$999,000

Featuring 3 ﬁnshed levels of cozy and sunny space, this
home is located on a cul-de-sac. A renovated cook’s
kitchen, a ﬁrst-ﬂoor family room and library, a renovated
and expanded master bath, and a huge, fenced yard with a
patio enhance the home.
Sharyn Goldman 301.529.7555/ 301.907.7600 (O).

This residence
features a unique,
3 level central atrium,
a top-level master
suite, and a large
kitchen with a dining
area that overlooks
Washington Circle.
The home has a
separately metered
lower level with
private quarters.
Frank Grifﬁn
202.256.4707 or
Jamie Finch
202.316.5600/
202.364.5200 (O).

Sited on a cul-de-sac lot, backing to parkland, this
builder’s own residence is a dream home, and shows like a
new home. The 5-bedroom residence includes a spacious
gourmet kitchen and a daylite, walkout lower level.
www.BiggarHomes.com.
Sylvia Biggar 301.299.2345/ 301.299.6000 (O).

Washington, D.C.

$1,895,000

This 3-bedroom, 2.5-bath classic home occupies a double
lot in the East Village of Georgetown. Features include a
double parlor living room, 4 ﬁreplaces, and a custom
kitchen with a separate dining room opening to a back
garden with an unﬁnished guest house. www.FMRES.com
Kerry Fortune 202.257.7447/202.944.8400(O).

Washington, D.C.

$4,445,000

This premier property is well-sited on a gracious corner lot
in a vibrant international business community. Magniﬁcent
for a residence or Embassy, the property features a grand
roof terrace, 6 bedrooms/ofﬁces, 5-plus baths, an elevator,
a security system, and a garage.
Neil Bacchus 301.674.8090/ 301.468.0606 (O).

Enjoy World-Class Service

with
Christie’s Great Estates and Long & Foster®,
the Best-Known and Most Effective Marketers
of Upper-Brackets Properties.
2000
Knoxville, Maryland

$1,395,000

Washington, D.C.

1800

This circa-1820 mansion presides on 76 acres, only 48
miles from Washington D.C. The 5-bedroom, 4-full-bath
home with 7 ﬁreplaces is solid and has been lovingly cared
for, but will require updating. The grounds include a barn,
a caretaker’s house, stone outbuildings, ﬁelds, woods, and
a spring. Tim Healy 301.980.4085/ 202.363.9700 (O).

And remember, Long & Foster sells
far more $1 million and above homes
in the Washington, D.C. Metro area
than the next four brokers combined!*

1200
1000
800

$1,595,000

Beautifully maintained, this single-owner residence
features a pool and approximately 5,000 square feet
of ﬁnished space, perfect for small and large-scale
entertaining. Sited on a 13,000-plus-square-foot double lot
in Chevy Chase, this custom-built home is minutes from
2 metros. Judy Kelly 202.374.5195/ 301.907.7600 (O).

*Source: Richard Miller Statistics. 2007 selected market share data. This representation is based in whole or in part on data supplied by MRIS®
or other regional or local Multiple Listing Services’ common databases. Neither these organizations nor THE LONG & FOSTER® COMPANIES
guarantee or are responsible in any way for the accuracy of the data. The data may not reﬂect all real estate activity in the market.

This 4-bedroom, 5.5-bath colonial offers a 2-story foyer,
a kitchen with a center island, and an elegant master
suite with 2 master baths. The ﬁnished, walkout lower
level includes a recreation room, a kitchenette, a bath,
and a den. Jamie Coley and Leigh Reed 888.907.6643/
240.497.1700 (O).

Potomac, Maryland

$1,250,000

Located on nearly a half-acre level, landscaped lot, this
home offers close proximity to the C&O Canal, towpath,
and swim and tennis club. A renovated gourmet kitchen
and master bath, a sunroom, a side-load garage, and a
circular drive make this one of River Fall’s best homes.
Sharyn Goldman 301.529.7555/ 301.907.7600 (O).

In Select Areas

Clad in brick, this
4-bedroom, 4.5-bath
colonial is sited on a
half-acre cul-de-sac
lot backing to woods.
The home features
a 2-story family
room with soaring
stone ﬁreplace, a
gourmet kitchen,
and a Williamsburginspired living and
dining room. Susan
Joy 703.201.6219
or Frankie Roberts
703.683.0400/
703.522.0500 (O).

Washington, D.C.

$1,300,000

This Forest Hills gem is a classic ﬁeld stone home
surrounded by English gardens on a 9,850-square-foot lot.
A living room, a ﬁreplace, a den, a dining room, a large
kitchen, a screened porch, 5 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, and a
ﬁnished third level complete the residence.
Denise Warner 202.487.5162/ 202.944.8400 (O).

HOME LIFE | OPENHOUSE

Prestigious Properties
These residences may range in size, but not in their elegance

ENGLISHMANOR
MALTALANE
MCLEANVA

Tucked away at the end of a
secluded street, renowned builder
Mike Bowman has constructed an
â&#x20AC;&#x153;English Cotswoldâ&#x20AC;? manor house
complete with authentic English
gardens. Built on a tree-filled acre, this luxurious residence features
embassy-size rooms for entertaining with 10-foot ceilings throughout
the entire main floor and master bedroom and 9-foot ceilings
elsewhere. The custom fixtures, magnificent moldings, and detailed
finishes make this a truly unique offering.
ASKING

LISTINGAGENT

Chris Fraley
703-217-7600
Keller Williams Realty

ELEGANTESCAPE

WOODLANDDRIVENW
WASHINGTONDC

Set on park-like grounds, this 1924
residence boasts English-influenced
architecture and offers elegant rooms with wonderful proportions.
The main level principal rooms are perfect for entertaining, while the
second and third levels contain a master suite with a custom dressing
room and four additional bedrooms. The lower level includes an au
pair suite with kitchenette, extra storage, laundry room with powder
room, and a two-car garage. Outside, a beautifully landscaped garden,
stone walkways, guesthouse, and a gated pool complete this one-ofa-kind property.
ASKING
LISTINGAGENTS William F. X. Moody and Robert Hryniewicki
202-243-1620
Washington Fine Properties, LLC

Petite mansion perfect for cultural institution,
foundation, embassy or private residence. Large
scale formal rooms include double parlors with
fireplaces and baronial dining room. Family living
quarters. Parking for up to ten cars. $17,500,000.

Magnificent home on Deep Creek Lake, Western
Maryland’s Four Season Mountain Resort. Seven
bedrooms, six baths on four levels with spectacular
views and beautiful wooded lake setting with 135
ft. of prime lake frontage and class A dock. Unique
blending of stone, ironwork and hardwood
detailing. $2,850,000.

Judy Lewis
Hugh Oates

202.486.4752

202.256.0522
202.257.5640

202.276.3344
202.271.3344

Gary Frey

202.280.2383

MCLEAN, VA

WESLEY HEIGHTS

KALORAMA

FOXHALL CRESCENT

Masterfully built custom home, over 9000 SF on
three amazing levels, including five bedrooms, five
and one half baths, gourmet kitchen, master suite
with copper tub & gas fireplace, three car garage,
au pair suite & home theatre. Ideal for formal and
large scale entertaining. $2,390,000.

Elegant and spacious home on quiet enclave ideal
for entertaining on a grand scale. A dramatic
20-foot foyer welcomes guests to this home. Large
formal living room and separate dining room.
Master suite with spacious master bath. Two
extra bedrooms and hall bath. Two car garage.
$1,600,000

Jeffrey Lockard
Joseph Poduslo

202.246.4433
202.487.6225

Rick Leverrier

202.957.7777

Jeffrey Lockard
Joseph Poduslo

202.246.4433
202.487.6225

Julia Diaz-Asper

202.256.1887

CLEVELAND PARK

DUPONT/LOGAN

DUPONT

GEORGETOWN

No expense has been spared in the meticulous
renovation of this handsome brick colonial. Built
in 1937, the residence features a sumptuous master
suite, three additional bedrooms and designer
baths, family room and two car garage with
additional off street parking. $1,695,000.

This classic detached brick Federal, built in 1876, was once featured
on the Georgetown House Tour. High ceilings and crown molding
frame the formal dining room, while the spacious living room has
French doors that open to a garden with a fountain and detached
garage. Three bedrooms, three-and-a-half baths, five fireplaces, plus
a family room and au-paire suite on the lower level complete the
house, located in the heart of Georgetown close to Volta Park, shops,
and restaurants.
ASKING
LISTINGAGENT

Terri Robinson
202-607-7737
Georgetown Long & Foster

LUXURYLIVING

PROSPECTSTREETNW
WASHINGTONDC

Wormley Row, in the heart of
Georgetown, is a new collection of 13 distinct
condominium residences and townhouses.
Beautiful one, two, and three bedroom
apartments offering top-of-the-line finishes,
grand-scale and architectural details are now
ready for occupancy. Custom finishes may still
be selected by the purchaser in certain units.
Underground parking is included with all
residences.
LISTINGPRICE
TOOVER
MILLION
LISTINGAGENTS Mary Grover Ehrgood
202.274.4694

John B. Adler
202.966.8838

Washington Fine Properties, LLC

122

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

The price is just as inviting.

With prices and interest rates as low as they’re going to go, it’s time to take the next step for your family
and purchase a custom home. Discover the finest service, designs, materials, features, finishes and
quality the world has to offer. And because we’re backed by the systems, cost-efficiency and resources
of a national company, all of our dream homes are realistically priced. So Buy Smart. Buy Keswick.

THEDISTRICT
Franklin D. Raines, the former CEO of
Fannie Mae who recently made a settlement
of $24.7 million to the federal government to
close the books on his controversial reign as
head of America’s largest guarantor of home
mortgages, has now set his sights on closing
another deal: one on his new home at
ALBEMARLESTREETNW. Currently under
contract with an asking price of $7,595,000,
the 98-year-old stucco Colonial known
as Beechwoods sits on 1.35 acres in Forest
Hills and boasts a pool and cabana, sports
and tennis courts, four-car garage and views
of Soapstone Valley National Park. Interior

124

highlights include a master bedroom suite
with his and hers baths, an adjacent terrace
and walk-in closet. There are six additional
bed rooms, five and a half baths, a family
room with cathedral ceiling, library, movie
theater, recreation room, exercise room and a
remodeled kitchen with breakfast room. The
listing agents are Washington Fine Properties’
Matthew B. McCormick, Ellen Morrell and
Bonnie Wimsatt. Jim Bell of Washington Fine
Properties represented the purchaser. Raines,
who now sits on the board of Steve Case’s
Revolution Health Company, has reportedly
also purchased a $4.9 million condominium at
the Ritz-Carlton Residences in Georgetown.

Meanwhile, Wendy Farrow Raines, his wife
for more than a quarter century, is said to
have a new $4.3 million home of her own in
Cleveland Park.
Georgetown Long and Foster’s Terri
Robinson, who represented the buyer, and
Margot Wilson of Arnold Bradley Davy Sargent
and Chew, who represented the seller, have
helped sell INDIANLANENW in Spring
Valley for $5.6 million. The 5,716-square-foot,
three-story manse with eight bedrooms and
six and a half baths was built in 1941 and had
been home to Mr. and Mrs. David Castiel,
president, CEO and founder of Ellipso Inc.,
a satellite communications company whose

WA S H I N G T O N L I F E

| O C T O B E R | washingtonlife.com

uxurious Waterfront Estate with breathtaking views on Potomac Creek at historic Pratt Point. Exquisitely decorated and
set on 10 private acres, this spectacular custom build colonial personifies resort-like estate living. This elegant residence
epitomizes everything one seeks in a luxury home - peace and quiet, stunning natural beauty, and extraordinary amenities
with meticulous attention to details. Hand-carved marble for exterior of the house. Hardwood and marble flooring
throughout. Not another site like this in the entire area. Words do not adequately portray the elegance and flow of this
rare opportunity - call for a private showing appointment.
$8,500,000

Other exclusive oďŹ&#x20AC;erings...

Aquia Creek - $3,500,000

Once-in-a-lifetime opportunity on Aquia Creek waterfront. Deep water,
fantastic views and accessible utilities. Very convenient location that
has unbelievable growth potential. This is truly a unique opportunity
for an enterprising developer. A total of 50 acres are available, call for
details. Seller of this property is relocating - make your call today.

shareholders include Boeing and Israel Aircraft.
The property was built in 1939 by Clarence
Gosnell, the patriarch of a now third-generation
family business, Gosnell Properties.
Viola Wentzel has sold her six-bedroom,
red brick row house at KALORAMA
ROAD NW , across from the French
ambassador’s residence and a few doors down
from the home of former Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld, thanks to Washington Fine
Properties’ realtors Bobbie Brewster, who listed
it for $2.8 million, and Jim Bell, who brought
the buyers, Andrew and Lynn Volmer, to the
table. Wentzel is the daughter of the late Kurt
Kiesinger, who served as chancellor of West
Germany from 1966 to 1969. She is also the
widow of National Geographic photographer
Volkmar Wentzel and co-author of the soonto-be-released Random House publication
entitled, Odysseys and Photographs: Four
National Geographic Field Men. It chronicles
her husband’s career, which took off in the
1930s when he published moody images of
Washington by night. After World War II, one
of his initial assignments took him to the
Indian sub-continent where the photographs
and motion pictures he shot were among
the last to capture the lavish splendor of the
British Raj and among the first to highlight
the then little-known Himalayan kingdom of
Nepal. With a camera as his passport to the
world, he documented foreign cultures for
nearly half a century and his legendary work
has been displayed in major galleries around
the globe.

MARYLAND
In Chevy Chase, healthcare policy
consultants Marion and Lawrence Lewin have
purchased unit #1103 in Somerset House
II, located at WISCONSIN AVENUE.
The sellers were attorney Dianne Felton and
Reginald Felton, director of federal relations for
the National School Boards Association. The
Feltons received $2,450,000, or $900,000 more
than they originally paid four years ago for the
3,021-square-foot luxury condominium with
two bedrooms and a den. Long and Foster’s
Zelda Heller served as both the listing and
selling agent in 2004 and again in this most
recent transaction.

126

Above: David Castiel recently
sold his 5,716-square-foot
home on Indian Lane NW in
Spring Valley. Right: CBS News
60 Minutes correspondent
Scott Pelley and his wife
Jane recently sold 804 Great
Cumberland Road in McLean
for $3,250.000.

VIRGINIA

was listed for $6.5 million by Salley Widmayer
Bill and Patricia Melton now own and Cynthia Howar.
CBS News 60 Minutes correspondent
CRESTLANE in McLean, having paid $5,725,000
for the 2.3-acre Hugh Newell Jacobsen-designed and Emmy-award-winning journalist Sco

Potomac waterfront contemporary. In 1981, Pelley and his wife Jane have sold their fiveBill Melton founded VeriFone, the company acre residence at GREATCUMBERLAND
that put credit card authorization terminals on ROAD in McLean for $3,250,000 Built in
retail counters throughout the planet. He is also 1978, it was renovated and expanded under
the founder of CyberCash. His wife is a poet, Jane Pelly’s supervision and now features
playwright and photographer as well as the a two-story glass “screening room” as well
founder, former executive director and board as a custom-paneled library, a heated pool
chairman of Peace X Peace, an international with a spa and waterfall, an outdoor stone
nonprofit group that utilizes the Internet to fireplace, gazebo and tennis court. The new
connect women of all cultures. The couples’ owner is Brian Camastral, Latin America
new home boasts floor-to-ceiling windows in regional president for Mars Inc., the candy
the living and dining rooms and four bedrooms conglomerate and the metropolitan area’s
opening onto the pool deck. Extras include a largest privately owned business. Patricia
media room with a retractable movie screen, four Derwinski of Weichert Realtors was the
wood-burning fireplaces and an elevator. The selling agent. Weichert Realtors’ Sue Huckaby
architecturally unique house was built in 1981 and Karen Briscoe with the Huckaby Briscoe
and had belonged to Barry E Appelman, the Group represented the Pelleys, who now live
chief technology officer of America Online and in Darien, Conn.
the man responsible for launching AOL Instant Please send real estate news items to
Messenger in 1994.The Fairfax County property columns@washingtonlife.com.

Architectural masterpiece with long driveway to 8 bedroom, turn of century detached house with picturesque
porch & well proportioned rooms on half-acre. Great
addition with Family room. 2-car garage. $4,900,000

Jamie Peva
A. Michael Sullivan, Jr.

INTERNATIONAL OFFERING

Potomac River Views! Well renovated extraordinary brick
Federal with a built in garage, private terraces and some
of Washington’s most inspiring views. Conveniently
located. Great entertaining space. $3,800,000

Jamie Peva
A. Michael Sullivan, Jr.

301-996-3220

INTERNATIONAL OFFERING

BETHESDA, MARYLAND

Welcome to this special home located on a spectacular
two acre lot in the Greens, a private enclave of homes
across from Avenel and backing to the 17th hole at
Congressional Country Club. Gracious southern plantation living at its best. $2,999,999

Eco-friendly home on five+ acres, five years young,
offers the best of all worlds. Four sides brick, six car
garage, state of the art home theater, custom built-ins,
multi-level deck, wrought iron gate and 9700 sq. ft. of
the highest quality finished space. $1,995,000

Stunning Village home tastefully renovated in the past
2 years. High ceilings, 4 fireplaces, main hall and dining room open to stone terrace. 5 bedrooms, 5 full and
2 half baths, second Family Room, custom wine cellar.
Private garden with pool. 2-car garage. $2,695,000

Sherry Davis

Nancy Taylor Bubes

Stunning home, totally renovated with designer addition,
elegant Master Suite, sunny Family Room Kitchen, and
French doors leading to outdoor living space.

Located in highly desirable Goldsboro, this spacious
town home has an excellent floor plan for those looking
for easy living in a wonderful location. Decorated by a
leading international designer with numerous upgrades,
this home is truly a rare find. $1,250,000

301-299-9598

2 bedroom + Den, 2 bath unit with open floor plan including a large Living Room with alcove, Dining Room,
renovated eat-in Kitchen and Bath. $699,000

INTERNATIONAL NETWORKS • LOCAL AFFILIATE

202-728-9500

SOCIETYPOP

THE

pleasure

OF YOUR COMPANY

The social set takes notice when invitations from these top embassies arrive in the mail

MONACO

KUWAIT

Invitations to this tiny but
extremely rich principality’s events
are highly prized. Who can resist
quaffing Champagne from a crystal
flute next to an Andy Warhol
portrait of the late Princess Grace?

Movie stars (Angelina Jolie, Michael Douglas), senators, Supreme Court justices and top
Cabinet members turn out for soirées hosted by the charismatic ambassador, a Kuwaiti royal,
and his charming wife. President Bush bestowed a singular honor by showing up with First
lady Laura Bush and Secretary of state Condoleezza Rice earlier this year.

GREATBRITAIN
Life-sized portraits of the Queen and other
Majesties always impress, as do the exclusive
guest lists at veddy proper affairs hosted by a
usually-titled ambassador.

COLOMBIA
The ambassador is the daughter of a former
president and knows the ins and outs of
stylish entertaining. Guests rave about the
delicious empanadas and dancing to live
cumbia music in a ballroom that has been
described as an architectural masterpiece.

130

FRANCE

ITALY

Art, fashion and Gallic glamour are mainstays
along with impressive wines and cheeses to
die for. A suave, debonair ambassador is an
added plus, especially since he is officially
sans spouse.

Count on Italian flair
and delicious pasta after
driving through Villa
Firenze’s impressive gates.
Opera stars occasionally
turn up, and may even sing
an aria or two.

JAPAN
Stroll in the garden, visit the
tea house and by all means
don’t miss the best sushi
outside of the Land
of the Rising Sun.

YEMEN
The eclectic crowd of young and attractive
overachievers likes to party just as much as
the long-serving, fun-loving ambassador.